Lagayscienza wrote: ↑March 21st, 2024, 8:11 am Whilst children are usually born with either male or female genitalia, gonads and chromosomes, some are born “intersex” and have both male and female organs and/or chromosomes. In the past, (much less so today) this was often dealt with surgically when the children were babies, but not always; in which case the child was usually raised as male or female. However, most youngsters with gender dysphoria are not intersex but have straight-forward male or female reproductive anatomy and chromosomes.The term "intersex(uality)" is a misnomer insofar as it wrongly suggests that all intersexuals are not either male or female. Actually, being intersexual merely means being afflicted with some disorder of sexual development or other, which doesn't necessarily mean being both male or female, or being neither male nor female. In fact, most so-called intersexuals are classifiable as either male or female—given the biological standard definition of sex, according to which having (only) gonads with the (not necessarily exercised) function of producing sperm (= testes/testicles) means being male, and having (only) gonads with the (not necessarily exercised) function of producing eggs (= ovaries) means being female.
There are simultaneous hermaphrodites in nature, which are both male and female at the same time; and there are also sequential hermaphrodites, which are male and female at different times. However, homo sapiens is not a species of sequential hermaphrodites; and simultaneous hermaphrodism (qua copresence of testicles and ovaries) is an unnatural, pathological phenomenon among humans, of which there are only a few hundred known cases. (And there is no known case in which both sperm and eggs are produced.)