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It really is a religion;

An anthropology professor at the University of Pittsburgh denied the difference between male and female skeletons to derisive laughter from students during a speaking engagement from college swimming champion Riley Gaines.


Daily Mail

Gabby Yearwood is a professor whose research focuses on 'the social constructions of race and racism, masculinity, gender, sex, Black Feminist and Black Queer theory, anthropology of sport and Black Diaspora' according to his bio.

Jeezus, what a pile of claptrap that lot is.
Yes, who asks scientists about science questions? Proudly idiotic politicians are the only people who can be trusted as educators.
 
I don't know why members of the audience were laughing but I suspect it had something to do with ignorance and dogma.
They're students, and he's a Black professor. It doesn't take much.
Do you agree with the professor about male and female skeletons being indistinguishable?
Yes. Or at least, I agree with his actual statement, which you are of course misquoting.

You can make an educated guess about biological sex if enough diagnostically relevant remains are present, but there's no way to derive any knowledge about cultural categorizations of gender or gender identity from material remains alone. The question posed was whether you could tell the difference between a man and a woman two thousand years from now. No, you could not do so with certainty, and if they belonged to a culture that lacked a written record, your guess would be even less accurate as you would have no basis for hypothesizing how that culture regarded gender differences at all, let alone how those individuals were regarded when they were alive. This would be true for an anthropologist now, looking at the past in most locations at that time distance. But since in this case the question is about a future anthropologist, they would presumably have access to a plurality of written and video knowledge about our culture's strategies for defining gender, and as such they would be well aware that many of our modern day cultures and social classes acknowledge a gender trinary and the possibility of gender transition, up to and including a fair number of surgeries and therapies that would affect several of those diagnostic criteria. Ergo, they would know for certain that their data could only ever lead them to a guess, of uncertain probability, even they had a very strong guess about biological sex, which is also not always the case. This is not unusual, in the real sciences, the possibility of uncertainty.

I love how she failed to so much as correctly define anthropology as a field, yet believes herself to be more expert in the subject than her interlocutor! :rolleyes:
 
I don't know why members of the audience were laughing but I suspect it had something to do with ignorance and dogma.
They're students, and he's a Black professor. It doesn't take much.
Do you agree with the professor about male and female skeletons being indistinguishable?
Yes. You can make an educated guess about biological sex if enough diagnostically relevant remains are present, but there's no way to derive any knowledge about cultural categorizations of gender or gender identity from material remains alone. The question posed was whether you could tell the difference between a man and a woman two thousand years from now. No, you could not do so with certainty, and if they belonged to a culture that lacked a written record, your guess would be even less accurate as you would have no basis for hypothesizing how that culture regarded gender differences at all, let alone how those individuals were regarded when they were alive. This would be true for an anthropologist now, looking at the past. But since in this case the question is about a future anthropologist, they would presumably have access to a plurality of knowledge about our strategies for defining gender, and as such they would be well aware that many of our modern day cultures acknowledge a gender trinary and the possibility of gender transition, up to and including a fair number of surgeries and therapies that would affect several of those diagnostic criteria. Ergo, they would know for certain that their data could only lead them to a guess, of uncertain probability.

I love how she failed to so much as correctly define anthropology as a field, yet believes herself to be more expert in the subject than her interlocutor! :rolleyes:
Well, I heard her say 100 years from now, not 2000 and based on the point she was making, it was implied in her statement that the male and female skeletons were fully intact, and that she WAS referring to biological sex and not gender.
 
I don't know why members of the audience were laughing but I suspect it had something to do with ignorance and dogma.
They're students, and he's a Black professor. It doesn't take much.
Do you agree with the professor about male and female skeletons being indistinguishable?
Yes. You can make an educated guess about biological sex if enough diagnostically relevant remains are present, but there's no way to derive any knowledge about cultural categorizations of gender or gender identity from material remains alone. The question posed was whether you could tell the difference between a man and a woman two thousand years from now. No, you could not do so with certainty, and if they belonged to a culture that lacked a written record, your guess would be even less accurate as you would have no basis for hypothesizing how that culture regarded gender differences at all, let alone how those individuals were regarded when they were alive. This would be true for an anthropologist now, looking at the past. But since in this case the question is about a future anthropologist, they would presumably have access to a plurality of knowledge about our strategies for defining gender, and as such they would be well aware that many of our modern day cultures acknowledge a gender trinary and the possibility of gender transition, up to and including a fair number of surgeries and therapies that would affect several of those diagnostic criteria. Ergo, they would know for certain that their data could only lead them to a guess, of uncertain probability.

I love how she failed to so much as correctly define anthropology as a field, yet believes herself to be more expert in the subject than her interlocutor! :rolleyes:
Well, I heard her say 100 years from now, not 2000 and based on the point she was making, it was implied in her statement that the male and female skeletons were fully intact, and that she WAS referring to biological sex and not gender.
Well, if she's going to ask a scientist questions and mock them for their responses, she'd better learn to say what she means rather than "implying" it. And the answer only changes so much, in any case, as the sexing of a skeleton always requires guesswork. If you had a perfect specimen, you would certainly be able to state chromosomal sex with certainty as you would be able to sequence their genome, placing the individual within the six or eight (not two) commonly encountered patterns. You would also be able to make a guess of fairly high but not certain probability about hormonal and anatomical sex, and that probability would not be the same for all individuals or specimens. But that would not tell you whether someone socially identified as "a man", or "a woman", or some other term, nor whether they did so throughout their entire life. That's a question of cultural categorization, psychological conviction, and social interaction, so a skeleton alone cannot answer it for you.
 
I don't know why members of the audience were laughing but I suspect it had something to do with ignorance and dogma.
They're students, and he's a Black professor. It doesn't take much.
Do you agree with the professor about male and female skeletons being indistinguishable?
Yes. Or at least, I agree with his actual statement, which you are of course misquoting.

You can make an educated guess about biological sex if enough diagnostically relevant remains are present, but there's no way to derive any knowledge about cultural categorizations of gender or gender identity from material remains alone. The question posed was whether you could tell the difference between a man and a woman two thousand years from now. No, you could not do so with certainty, and if they belonged to a culture that lacked a written record, your guess would be even less accurate as you would have no basis for hypothesizing how that culture regarded gender differences at all, let alone how those individuals were regarded when they were alive. This would be true for an anthropologist now, looking at the past in most locations at that time distance. But since in this case the question is about a future anthropologist, they would presumably have access to a plurality of written and video knowledge about our culture's strategies for defining gender, and as such they would be well aware that many of our modern day cultures and social classes acknowledge a gender trinary and the possibility of gender transition, up to and including a fair number of surgeries and therapies that would affect several of those diagnostic criteria. Ergo, they would know for certain that their data could only ever lead them to a guess, of uncertain probability, even they had a very strong guess about biological sex, which is also not always the case. This is not unusual, in the real sciences, the possibility of uncertainty.

I love how she failed to so much as correctly define anthropology as a field, yet believes herself to be more expert in the subject than her interlocutor! :rolleyes:
So, apparently there are chemical methods involving tracking proteins that end up in the teeth.

I would say if the teeth contain some forensic evidence of systemic egg or sperm production you could at least get male/female. That's as far as it goes.

I know this because I was looking up the subject and apparently both of the two famous lovers buried together were male, or at least they were not female.

While the bones' rough shapes don't mean a thing, while DNA from the bones won't mean a thing necessarily, "chemicals only present due to egg production" or "chemicals only present during sperm production" being located inside the bones indicates a positive ID capability.
 
I would say if the teeth contain some forensic evidence of systemic egg or sperm production you could at least get male/female. That's as far as it goes.
In other words, hormonal sex as I describe in the post above. There are a few clever ways of trying to guess at this, actually. For instance, if someone has given birth, they must have been hormonally female at birth as far as we know, and experience of pregnancy and birth often leaves quite a few clues on the skeleton. You may laugh - students often do - but this is often a means by which remains are sexed if no cranium is extant and pubic anatomy is otherwise indeterminate.
 
I would say if the teeth contain some forensic evidence of systemic egg or sperm production you could at least get male/female. That's as far as it goes.
In other words, hormonal sex as I describe in the post above. There are a few clever ways of trying to guess at this, actually. For instance, if someone has given birth, they must have been hormonally female at birth as far as we know, and experience of pregnancy and birth often leaves quite a few clues on the skeleton. You may laugh - students often do - but this is often a means by which remains are sexed if no cranium is extant and pubic anatomy is otherwise indeterminate.
Oh, I'm not laughing at all. I'm just pointing out that 100% confidence of "female" CAN be ascertained from SOME skeletons, but often not from the actual shape of the bones, and as mentioned, that says nothing of whether they were a man or woman.

It also often says nothing of whether they had a penis or vagina, unless the signs in question are clear marks of pregnancy and childbirth.
 
Reminds me of a joke from the 1950s:

"I hear the police found the skeleton of a black man in the Serpentine".

"Hang on, if it was a skeleton, how could they know he was black?"

"He had a bus conductor's hat on".
 
Kyle Rittenhouse might be experiencing buyers remorse. These are the people who follow Matt Walsh, Libs of Tiktok etc.

 
Yes, who asks scientists about science questions?
Oh ffs, scientists are not infallible. It really is a religion for you isn’t it? We must not question the high priests who bestow knowledge upon us with their immutable wisdom. Keep your mask on buddy.
 
Yes, who asks scientists about science questions?
Oh ffs, scientists are not infallible.
No one said that they were. But that doesn't make pointed and purposeful ignorance any more desirable a path. If you laugh at the very idea of encountering professional expertise, the results of that attitude will eventually show quite plainly as more advanced nations eclipse and leave this yours behind.
 
Yes, who asks scientists about science questions?
Oh ffs, scientists are not infallible. It really is a religion for you isn’t it? We must not question the high priests who bestow knowledge upon us with their immutable wisdom. Keep your mask on buddy.
So, between scientists, jackasses sitting on their couch, and jackasses sitting in congress do you think is the most.appropriate group to ask about the behavior of reality on a technical level?

If you want to question the high priest, study theology first. Several agnostics/atheists I know here know more about theology than any pastor I have ever met.

If you want to question the scientist, get a science degree.

If you want to quit representing yourself badly, you can probably manage that without doing either of those things, just by shutting up about the technical behavior of reality.
 
No one said that they were.
Your snotty response implied. Ooooh we can’t question it because a “scientist” said so. Piss off.
Because a scientist said, you are more than permitted to question it. Science is a philosophy entirely contingent on asking questions.

Rationally.

With empirical evidence.
 
No one said that they were.
Your snotty response implied. Ooooh we can’t question it because a “scientist” said so. Piss off.
Because a scientist said, you are more than permitted to question it. Science is a philosophy entirely contingent on asking questions.

Rationally.

With empirical evidence.
The issue is that TSwizzle wants to question science without using science at all.

Anyone as you say can question a scientist... using science.

Question a scientist without using science and you will get laughed at and told to go back to jerking off on the couch.

Or something like that.
 
From that very same article:

According to the Smithsonian: 'Males tend to have larger, more robust bones and joint surfaces, and more bone development at muscle attachment sites. However, the pelvis is the best sex-related skeletal indicator, because of distinct features adapted for childbearing.

'The skull also has features that can indicate sex, though slightly less reliably.'

They note that sex-related differences are not obvious in the bones of pre-pubescent children.

However, Discover Magazine notes that skeletal studies regarding sex can lead to 'profound mistakes' and can ignore the existence of intersex people, who are born with a mix of X and Y chromosomes.

Males tend to have certain features (not always have and not only males can have them), skull features can indicate sex though less reliably, and sex-related differences are not obvious on the skeletons of persons who have not undergone puberty. Also, there's the matter of intersex people.

So the correct answer to the question 'If you were to dig up a human — two humans — a hundred years from now, both a man and a woman, could you tell the difference strictly off of bones?', is "no".
How did you arrive at that conclusion? Given the facts you introduced, and bearing in mind that "a man and a woman" does not mean "persons who have not undergone puberty", and bearing in mind that intersex people are rare, and bearing in mind that the question said "two humans", not "partial remains of two humans with the pelvises missing" it appears the correct answer would be something along the lines of "yes, with 99%+ probability of being right." It seems you are calling that answer "no". Why? Are you assuming the question contained an implicit "with 100% certainty" qualifier?

I don't know why members of the audience were laughing but I suspect it had something to do with ignorance and dogma.
Very likely. Specifically, Professor Yearwood's dogma.

Do you agree with the professor about male and female skeletons being indistinguishable?
Yes. Or at least, I agree with his actual statement, which you are of course misquoting.

You can make an educated guess about biological sex if enough diagnostically relevant remains are present, but there's no way to derive any knowledge about cultural categorizations of gender or gender identity from material remains alone. The question posed was whether you could tell the difference between a man and a woman two thousand years from now. No, you could not do so with certainty, and if they belonged to a culture that lacked a written record, your guess would be even less accurate as you would have no basis for hypothesizing how that culture regarded gender differences at all...
If in fact the reason Professor Yearwood answered as he did was because he sincerely took the "a man and a woman" bit to mean that Gaines was asking him whether an archaeologist digging up two human skeletons could tell which person had identified as a man and which had identified as a woman, or was asking him whether the archaeologist could tell whether the humans would have been categorized by some unknown remote illiterate culture as man or woman, then Yearwood is an even more complete idiot than the transcript suggests he is. Gaines was plainly not asking him a question about gender identity or cultural gender. If those are what "man" and "woman" mean to Yearwood, well, one of the risks you run when you choose to train yourself to speak Humpty Dumpty instead of English is that you will make laughably idiotic misinterpretations of the words of people who are not initiates into your subculture's private language, and who therefore address you in plain English.
 
From that very same article:

According to the Smithsonian: 'Males tend to have larger, more robust bones and joint surfaces, and more bone development at muscle attachment sites. However, the pelvis is the best sex-related skeletal indicator, because of distinct features adapted for childbearing.

'The skull also has features that can indicate sex, though slightly less reliably.'

They note that sex-related differences are not obvious in the bones of pre-pubescent children.

However, Discover Magazine notes that skeletal studies regarding sex can lead to 'profound mistakes' and can ignore the existence of intersex people, who are born with a mix of X and Y chromosomes.

Males tend to have certain features (not always have and not only males can have them), skull features can indicate sex though less reliably, and sex-related differences are not obvious on the skeletons of persons who have not undergone puberty. Also, there's the matter of intersex people.

So the correct answer to the question 'If you were to dig up a human — two humans — a hundred years from now, both a man and a woman, could you tell the difference strictly off of bones?', is "no".
How did you arrive at that conclusion? Given the facts you introduced, and bearing in mind that "a man and a woman" does not mean "persons who have not undergone puberty", and bearing in mind that intersex people are rare, and bearing in mind that the question said "two humans", not "partial remains of two humans with the pelvises missing" it appears the correct answer would be something along the lines of "yes, with 99%+ probability of being right." It seems you are calling that answer "no". Why? Are you assuming the question contained an implicit "with 100% certainty" qualifier?

Let's go over it point by point:

Males tend to have certain features. Not all males have them, and males are not the only ones who can have them. Therefore, those features might indicate a male but not positively identify one.

Skull features can indicate sex but are even less reliable than the 'certain features' already mentioned. Therefore, skull features might indicate a male but not positively identify one.

A person who has not undergone puberty is probably a child but might be someone with Kallman syndrome. If a male person didn't go through puberty but still lived to be 89 years old, would his skeleton indicate he was an elderly child, or an elderly male with unusual features? Would an anthropologist be able to correctly identify their sex from their bones alone?

And wrt intersex conditions being rare:

The most thorough existing research finds intersex people to constitute an estimated 1.7% of the population*, which makes being intersex about as common as having red hair (1%-2%).

Here's a case study of a father of 4 who got a hysterectomy at age 70 <warning: contains graphic photos of the surgery>.

Here is a post from Toni linking to a report of a phenotypically male who fathered a child and apparently also ovulated.

I wonder what their skeletal remains, especially their teeth, would indicate about their sex.

Anyway, you might be able to say that the person whose skeletal remains you are studying was probably a male or a female, but you cannot say for certain, which is the entire point. And that doesn't even begin to address what is meant by the terms 'man' and 'woman' in the English language, or the variety of terms in other languages in cultures that recognize more than two genders.
 
If in fact the reason Professor Yearwood answered as he did was because he sincerely took the "a man and a woman" bit to mean that Gaines was asking him whether an archaeologist digging up two human skeletons could tell which person had identified as a man and which had identified as a woman, or was asking him whether the archaeologist could tell whether the humans would have been categorized by some unknown remote illiterate culture as man or woman, then Yearwood is an even more complete idiot than the transcript suggests he is. Gaines was plainly not asking him a question about gender identity or cultural gender.
Then she's illiterate on gender studies, as are you.

Nonetheless, there is no other kind of gender than that which is circumscribed by cultural assumptions and values. Gender is a social construction by nature.
 
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