ruby sparks
Contributor
Sure. But personally I'm blue in the face saying that things do not have to be inherited (or in the form of fixed structures either). To me, those are just unnecessary restrictions when analysing the matter and looking for explanations and causes.
In other words, if a person is genuinely trans because of, say, something that has to do with early brain plasticity, they are still really, actually female in gender terms, are they not?
So yet again I'm wondering what your point is.![]()
Two reasons.
First, the cause may change the treatment. If the cause of my epilepsy was a brain tumor or brain trauma, I probably wouldn't be treated with anti-seizure drugs alone. Right now, transitioning is the treatment that works best, and it doesn't work equally well for each person. If we knew the cause, there might be different treatments available, or at least, we might look for other treatments for different causes that might be more effective and less invasive for those causes.
Second, as mentioned, there's a high level of risk that bad actors could abuse research based on "nature" differences to justify existing disadvantages in treatment of people.
Again, I agree.
In case it’s not completely obvious, in the last several pages, since metaphor’s question, the only thing I’ve really been interested in, has been the responses to his question (initially by Toni but then somehow krypton and I got into a tangle).
A bit blinkered and possibly pedantic I know, but the result is that nearly every time you’ve replied, I have found myself agreeing, but wondering what it has to do with that (the specific thing I’ve been interested in this last few pages).
So in a way, sorry.
To you and to krypton.
I’ll let you into a secret. What’s been interesting me is, I think, what motivated metaphor. I do agree with him that....how to put it....ideologies can skew approaches. There is a tension between, for example, a preference to cite brain differences for one thing but not another, when one’s basic approach leads one to want to cite one over the other in two different directions in two separate scenarios where one’s (in this case liberal, progressive) ideological preferences coincide. This can lead to awkward answers to questions. Imo the consistent approach is to say that brain differences are most likely causal in both cases, even if in different ways or to different extents.
Suspecting a gotcha or being wary of where the questioner is going to go with an answer are not good reasons to obfuscate or not take the point, imo.
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