Jump to content

TrackerNeil

Members
  • Posts

    24,601
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://peccable.com/duchess
  • ICQ
    0
  • Yahoo
    Trackerneil

Profile Information

  • Queen of Thorns
  • Gender
    Male

Recent Profile Visitors

7,348 profile views

TrackerNeil's Achievements

Council Member

Council Member (8/8)

  1. My understanding is that the offenses mentioned in the bill need not have resulted in convictions, and that's my problem with this bill. That means the prosecution can dig up any and all accusations for presentation at trial, as long as they can be argued to be relevant. I'm not necessarily against prior convictions being admitted as evidence, but mere accusations? Nah. The defense cannot be expected to defend against the charges plus any and all allegations the prosecution is able to scare up, no matter how credible they may be. And, yes, I know the defense has the opportunity to cross-examine and challenge credibility, but I envision the effect that a parade of witnesses would have on a jury. Lots of people think that where there is smoke there is fire, and I don't think we should be sending people to jail based on folk wisdom.
  2. I don't know what you mean by "sympathetic." I believe sex is binary because I think it makes sense to believe that, not because I think Colin Wright is hot (although he is) or that Luana Maroja is wicked cool (she might be). I sense a difference between you and I on the issue of association; that is, the movements or media with whom people are perceived to be aligned with. For myself, I no longer worry very much about that kind of thing; instead, I try to focus on the ideas people put forward. Keeping that model in mind, I can agree with, say, Colin Wright on the binary nature of sex, and disagree with him on pronoun usage. If he gives a talk to Moms for LIberty, I still feel the same way about both positions. I try to separate the message from the messenger, and hopefully I am successful more often than not. Others can pursue a different path, but that's mine.
  3. This is a sword that cuts both ways, I think. If Jerry Coyne is to be disregarded because he doesn't like social-justice politics, than isn't Jack Turban in the same boat for his own advocacy? If we go too far down that road, there won't be many expert opinions we can consider at all. Also, other scientists who think sex is binary include Luana Maroja, at Williams College, Carole Hooven at Harvard, and Emma Hilton at the University of Manchester.
  4. Exactly. I find the "argument to exceptions" to be odd. I mean, occasionally, there are human beings born without functional eyes, but we still say that binocular vision is a normal human trait. If very, very rarely a human is born with only one leg, no one would seriously argue that it can no longer be said that humans are bipedal. Yes, occasionally there is a Castor Semenya, for whom sex is more difficult to clearly ascertain, but I think it's strange to think that her existence means there's no binary.
  5. Partricularly coming from gay people. For years and years we were suspected of either molesting children or trying to make them gay, or sometimes both. I guess Gays Against Groomers never got that lesson in history class.
  6. Although I agree with Wright on many things, I disagree in this. I don't think that anything about biological sex requires us to use or not use this or that pronoun. He's absolutist about that. I understand whence that absolutism comes, but I don't ascribe to it. I have never heard Wright say, however, that science requires us to agree with that view. (I have heard him speak many times and I read his Substack and I've never seen anything like that.) My best guess is that he'd agree that he's expressing a personal opinion and not a scientific one. However, he occasionally does Q-and-A sessions, so I could ask him, see what he says.
  7. I don't disagree with that, although I think that people who want to harm others need not settle upon science as an excuse--there are a world of other reasons. People have said that gays were corrupting morality, or that Jews were secretly controlling everybody's money, neither of which are scientific observations. In short, if one wants to be a terrible person, one excuse will do as well as any other. I appreciate your reply. I think I understand your thinking better than I did previously.
  8. @Matrim Fox Cauthon, I'll admit this your response isn't what I expected, and I appreciate the effort you took to write this. I'll reply. These feel like social concerns, and as I stated upthread I never feel the need for science to tell me why I should be a decent person. I think there are explanations for these things to be found that lie outside the belief of sex as spectrum, or even sex as binary. But I am curious--can you cite some specific "evolutionary changes and adaptations in humans' that are explained by sex as spectrum that are not well explained by a binary approach?
  9. Let's get the record straight before anyone gets too twisted up about this: Here's the Trevor Noah interview, and the comments that we're all referencing are at 2:57. This is just a bad argument, and getting hung up over my humility, or lack of same, is a derailment tactic. However, it is a good example of the level of discourse we often see on this topic. We don't talk about ideas; we scrutinze each other for hints of the foolishness/hypocrisy/bigotry/whatever we are sure must motivate what we are saying. That said, I will concede that I was gently mocking Ivy, and no matter how bad her argument is, that wasn't very humble of me, so accordingly I have removed that part of my comment. Hopefully, we can try to discuss the actual argument and not what I said about it.
  10. I doubt we can, but, for the sake of the thread, I'll modify my original post so we can move away from a discussion of Just How Humble Trackerneil Is.
  11. Oh, she was a piece of work on that program! Her argument was basically: "I am a biological creature and not a robot, and my identification cards/papers all say I am female. This is not a good argument. (Edited to ensure no topic derailment.) EDITED TO ADD: Something that bugs me about the notion of sex as spectrum is that I don't know where it gets us. I mean, germ theory teaches us how disease spreads, evolutionary theory helps explains the way species develop, but what does sex-as-spectrum tell us about the natural world? Sex is a reproductive strategy, and for nearly every animal on the planet, and (I believe) all mammals, and certainly human beings, reproduction requires a small-gamete producer plus a large-gamete producer. The binary explains how that works; the spectrum doesn't. If a notion put forward as science doesn't explain the natural world, I don't see the value.
  12. DMC, I am curious. Correct me if I am wrong, but you seem to disagree with @Ran--and with Dawkins--about the binary nature of sex. Assuming I have that right, can you tell me why you disagree? Was there a time you thought sex was binary and then changed your mind? If so, what convinced you? I'd like to try to understand. EDITED TO ADD: I'm not asking you to persuade me; I just want to know what persuaded you.
  13. I have not gotten into these back-and-forths, because they are often not the exchange of ideas but just jousting. However, this is just wrong, wrong, wrong. No one here has suggested that, and it's my understanding that the mods would not permit it. I really try to speak from a place of humility, but what you have said here is just not true.
×
×
  • Create New...