JackDaydream wrote: ↑April 2nd, 2024, 12:23 pmThe transgender people are in between the genders to a large extent, even though some would say that they identify completely with the gender to which they have made a transition to. It may be partly semantic and does involve a person's sense of identity. Similarly, some people with intersex issues identify as intersex, or simply as male or female, and it is personal choice. What's the problem with this? It goes beyond ovaries/testicles and chromosomes. There are people who disagree about this, and no one can say what a person must think.
The problem is that nowadays many people tell us (wrongly) that one's sex is defined or determined by one's sexual self-identification.
(By "sex" I mean one's
natural sex, not one's "legal sex".)
What is self-identification (as sth)?
"to self-identify = to believe or assert that one belongs to a certain group or class" (American Heritage)
"to self-identify = to believe that you are a particular kind of person, especially when other people do not think that you are that kind of person" (Cambridge Dictionary)
It should be obvious that
believing or asserting to be X isn't synonymous with and doesn't entail
being X.
We could distinguish between
objective gender identity and
subjective gender identity, with the former consisting in a person's actual
sex and the latter consisting in her/his
sexual self-identification.
What gender theorists call "gender identity" is nothing more than
subjective gender identity = gender self-identification = gender self-belief.
(By "self-belief" I mean
belief about oneself, not
belief in oneself qua self-confidence.)
Belief doesn't entail knowledge, so self-belief doesn't entail self-knowledge either. If you believe to be female/male, you don't thereby
know you're female/male, since you can
falsely believe to be female/male.