That’s a very long way of saying the same thing as @Nalivai@lemmy.world did.
And while I don’t think you’re wrong on the binary model of sex being disinclusive of intersex people and those with sex-related chromosomal disorders - that is not the same thing as saying biological sex is a lie.
Pinning down a precise definition of sex is incredibly difficult for biologists, the best definitions we have are a vague cloud of all of these vaguely related things.
Sex is the physiological result of sex chromosome differentiation.
By conventional standards that’s “XY is male, XX is female”.
Now we both know that model doesn’t cover everybody, but saying we have no definition because you disagree with the definition given is just ignorant.
For any rigorous definition we come up with, that actually produces a distinct number of sexes, we can throw some curveballs at it that require the writing of exceptions and special clauses and caveats. We end up oversimplifying dozens of different variables into these broad categories that then lead to worse outcomes for the people who deviate from the dogmatic oversimplifications. And if we actually count each intersex condition and permutation and stage of transsexual transition as its own sex, then we end up with thousands of different sexes, and next to no predictive utility! It’s a nightmare!
Saying that you end up with no predictive utility because a model only covers +99% of cases is also ignorant.
Every model that ever exists will always have caveats and exceptions. Simplification of anything comes with inaccuracies that end up needing to be addressed…
My philosophy is: If you can’t create a model that is accurate, fair, and useful… maybe you’re trying to create the wrong kind of model. Go back to the drawing board and reevaluate your foundational assumptions. Come back with a different core idea.
… And your take on this sounds an awful lot like the old GOP proposition of “if its not 100% perfect its not worth doing”.
A model that covers +99% of cases, but requires caveats and special attention towards intersex and trans people is better than no model at all.
Especially when it comes to very really physiological differences that can get you killed with inadequate medical attention.
What we have ended up doing with the idea of biological sex would be absurd in any other scientific field. Imagine if chemists said “There are two elements: Hydrogen and helium. Together they make up 99% of all atoms, and everything else is a defect.” That’s what we’re doing with sex.
That’s a poor argument - as from an objective perspective, that’s entirely true.
If you randomly took an atom from the universe right now, an overwhelmingly high majority of the time it’d be hydrogen or helium.
Basically all of Chemistry is dedicated to covering the exceptions to that rule because we’re almost entirely made if the exceptions. But from the perspective of Hydrogen and Helium we’re biased.
I do understand what you’re trying to say, and I do agree fundamentally that a purely binary model is disinclusive of the people that don’t fit - and that is shitty - but throwing out the entire idea of biological sex instead of suggesting that we need to be teaching a more spectral model of sex (like we’ve started doing with gender) I respectfully disagree with.
Maybe, maybe, if what you’re saying was true, and the rigid binary was trully covering 99% with the predicting power you’re claiming, maybe that would be useful. But it’s not 99%, it’s not rigid, it’s not binary, and it’s not predictive, really.
People with specific chromosome combination have specifics that are useful to think about in some context. People who produce cells related to giving birth are different from those who don’t, which is also a category. People who have dangly bits are different from people who’s bits are sucked in. Hormone patterns do wild shit which can also be categorised.
Picking and slicing those categories to somehow still come up with two sexes doesn’t add shit to this. Clinging to it as if it’s somehow important is not useful, and frankly weird.
You’re putting words in my mouth here. I’m not advocating for a strict binary of male or female.
I’m aware that intersex people and sex-related disorders occupy a spectrum between.
We ought to do better to educate people on those that lie in the spectrum - but that is entirely different to advocating for the idea that biological sex is a lie because it doesn’t fit your world view.
Even if you use the most generous estimate of those who exist in that spectrum, per the Disorders of Sex Development (DSD) Consortium, that number is still <2% of the population.
Modelling clinical outcomes based on categories that apply to >49/50 people is not wildly inaccurate as you seem to be claiming. Of course we should do Our best to ensure that those in spectrum are covered as well, but a “model” that covers 100% of people is just a list of everyone on Earth - which is not only a privacy nightmare, but also has zero predictive utility.
Yes, but those categories are all traits associated with either XX or XY chromosome development.
Having a penis is a Y-linked trait, having a womb is an X-linked trait.
That isn’t me trying to deny anyone’s chosen identity, but it is a biological fact that (with current technology) cannot be changed.
And that is true even for intersex individuals.
I’m not bothered to sit here and argue with someone who’s attitude is that of science denialism. If I wanted that I could go argue with a Flat Earther, so I’m going to let you have the last word on this one. Peace
That’s a very long way of saying the same thing as @Nalivai@lemmy.world did.
And while I don’t think you’re wrong on the binary model of sex being disinclusive of intersex people and those with sex-related chromosomal disorders - that is not the same thing as saying biological sex is a lie.
Sex is the physiological result of sex chromosome differentiation. By conventional standards that’s “XY is male, XX is female”. Now we both know that model doesn’t cover everybody, but saying we have no definition because you disagree with the definition given is just ignorant.
Saying that you end up with no predictive utility because a model only covers +99% of cases is also ignorant.
Every model that ever exists will always have caveats and exceptions. Simplification of anything comes with inaccuracies that end up needing to be addressed…
… And your take on this sounds an awful lot like the old GOP proposition of “if its not 100% perfect its not worth doing”.
A model that covers +99% of cases, but requires caveats and special attention towards intersex and trans people is better than no model at all.
Especially when it comes to very really physiological differences that can get you killed with inadequate medical attention.
That’s a poor argument - as from an objective perspective, that’s entirely true.
If you randomly took an atom from the universe right now, an overwhelmingly high majority of the time it’d be hydrogen or helium.
Basically all of Chemistry is dedicated to covering the exceptions to that rule because we’re almost entirely made if the exceptions. But from the perspective of Hydrogen and Helium we’re biased.
I do understand what you’re trying to say, and I do agree fundamentally that a purely binary model is disinclusive of the people that don’t fit - and that is shitty - but throwing out the entire idea of biological sex instead of suggesting that we need to be teaching a more spectral model of sex (like we’ve started doing with gender) I respectfully disagree with.
Maybe, maybe, if what you’re saying was true, and the rigid binary was trully covering 99% with the predicting power you’re claiming, maybe that would be useful. But it’s not 99%, it’s not rigid, it’s not binary, and it’s not predictive, really.
People with specific chromosome combination have specifics that are useful to think about in some context. People who produce cells related to giving birth are different from those who don’t, which is also a category. People who have dangly bits are different from people who’s bits are sucked in. Hormone patterns do wild shit which can also be categorised.
Picking and slicing those categories to somehow still come up with two sexes doesn’t add shit to this. Clinging to it as if it’s somehow important is not useful, and frankly weird.
You’re putting words in my mouth here. I’m not advocating for a strict binary of male or female. I’m aware that intersex people and sex-related disorders occupy a spectrum between.
We ought to do better to educate people on those that lie in the spectrum - but that is entirely different to advocating for the idea that biological sex is a lie because it doesn’t fit your world view.
Even if you use the most generous estimate of those who exist in that spectrum, per the Disorders of Sex Development (DSD) Consortium, that number is still <2% of the population.
Modelling clinical outcomes based on categories that apply to >49/50 people is not wildly inaccurate as you seem to be claiming. Of course we should do Our best to ensure that those in spectrum are covered as well, but a “model” that covers 100% of people is just a list of everyone on Earth - which is not only a privacy nightmare, but also has zero predictive utility.
Yes, but those categories are all traits associated with either XX or XY chromosome development. Having a penis is a Y-linked trait, having a womb is an X-linked trait. That isn’t me trying to deny anyone’s chosen identity, but it is a biological fact that (with current technology) cannot be changed. And that is true even for intersex individuals.
I’m not bothered to sit here and argue with someone who’s attitude is that of science denialism. If I wanted that I could go argue with a Flat Earther, so I’m going to let you have the last word on this one. Peace