SigmatheZeta said:
I have literally no sense of humor for semantic arguments. They are tantamount to basing your worldview on a pun.
No, they are not tantamount to that. And it is not about a sense of humor. It is about whether transmen and men and/or transwomen are women (I'll call those 'trans claims' for short). I am willing to argue that this is almost certainly not the case for nearly all trans men or trans women at least, and in any event, it would be unwarranted to believe they are. In order to make that case, I would of course use evidence about the way in which English speakers use the words "man" and "woman", since the meaning of the words is given by usage.
SigmatheZeta said:
I have very strong nominalist views. We would be better off taking that up, in greater detail, on one of the philosophy forums. The bottom-line is that I find hypostatization to be profoundly offensive.
If
this is what you mean by "hypostatization", that has nothing to do with what I am doing. As for your claim that you find it profoundly offensive, if that is a claim about your own personal reaction, I have nothing do say. If you on the other hand are saying that hypostatization is very immoral, I do not see any good reason to think so in general. It is simply a philosophy mistake.
SigmatheZeta said:
My nominalist views affect my views on semiotic theory. I owe nothing to abstract things. I do not owe anything to my language, and my language owes its very existence to me. My language is my slave. Sometimes, I like to beat my slave with a whip just because doing so amuses me. Sometimes, I truncate its limbs just to keep myself in practice. I will use my language in the manner that is the most convenient for me.
Language is not the sort of entity one can own things to. But it is not yours in the sense of property. It is yours in the sense that you are a native speaker. And while you can choose the words that you find more convenient, that does not change the meaning of the words in English, which is given by the usage in a community of speakers, not by you in particular. For that matter, I can choose to define the word 'demon' to mean 'a male human being', and then the statement "I am an demon" is true in the modified variant of English that I have just invented. However, it is not true in English, and it would be a confusion on my part to believe that a person who says - in English - that I am not a demon is mistaken.
SigmatheZeta said:
It is convenient for me to call myself a woman. Calling myself a woman makes me feel pretty damn fantastic. I will do what makes me feel good. I will do what makes my life better. To my language, I am a deity. May my will be done.
Bringing up your particular case puts me in a difficult position due to the obscure rule against "misgendering", so I have difficulty replying (i.e., because I do not know whether I will be allowed to, not because your answer presents a difficult point).
But I will reply avoiding your case: Going back to my example, imagine it is convenient for Elliot Page to call Elliot Page a man. And then I go on and say that Elliot Page is not a man. Then my statement is not false just on account of Elliot Page finding it convenient to say that. For that matter, if I find it convenient to call myself a demon, that would not make it false if other people assert - in English - that I am not a demon.
SigmatheZeta said:
Don't you wanna to be evil, like me?
Don't you wanna to be cruel?
Don't you wanna be nasty and brutal and cool?
Not really, why?
SigmatheZeta said:
I do not require a good reason to butcher this language. I can butcher this language for fun if I want to.
Sure. But that does not have anything to do with whether trans claims are true - in English.
SigmatheZeta said:
What it sounds like you want to do is create a semantic argument to try to pressure me into calling myself a man when I really do not want to and when doing so is extremely bad for my mental health.
It may sound like that
to you, but you have no good reason to suspect so. Furthermore, I am not trying to do any of the sort. In fact, I am trying to
avoid talking about
you or anyone else in the thread, because there is an obscure rule against something called "misgendering" that I don't want to risk being considered in breach by the moderators.
As for my motivation, remember how this began.
You made disparaging general claims about the motivations of other people. I told you about some of our motivations, and then I offered to make my case if you were willing to debate seriously. It seems either you do not, or you do not understand the disagreement enough to debate, as you go on the offensive but without touching on the central points.
SigmatheZeta said:
If you are like other people I have interacted with that have relied on semantic arguments, then you want to try to entrap me into agreeing that I should call myself the "correct" thing, so you can mount some sort of clever argument, based on rigged assumptions, that makes it "incorrect" to call myself a woman.
I do not care about what you call yourself. I do care about the attacks - from canceling to on-line bullying at least - against people who disagree with trans claims. Going back to my example, I do not care if Elliot Page calls Elliot Page a man. I do care if someone (whether Elliot Page or someone else) accuses someone else of either making a false claim or acting wrongfully just on account on their saying, arguing, etc., that Elliot Page is a woman or is not a man.
SigmatheZeta said:
I will call myself a woman because it makes me feel good, and it is arguably necessary for my mental health. I do not owe anything to semantics.
I do not care that you do that. It's the Woke attack on those who do not agree with trans claims that worries me - among other things, but not what you choose to call yourself.
SigmatheZeta said:
I will dangle your language upside-down over a cauldron of boiling hot oil if it suits me to do so.
But that does not have any bearing on whether trans claims are true.
SigmatheZeta said:
The answer is no, no, no, no,
no, no, hell to the no.
The only question I asked you was whether Martha Philpotts was in error. What is it that you are replying 'no' to?
SigmatheZeta said:
Semantic arguments tend to be the most grievous of bad faith arguments.
And here you make a false and unwarranted insinuation at best. I argue in good faith. But you have not even engaged my arguments. You instead attacked something not related to them, and attacked me. I realize that you do not realize that you are doing any of this. But that does not change the fact that you are doing it.
SigmatheZeta said:
The exact and most correct description of what I am is a "transgender woman." This implies, intrinsically, that my assigned sex at birth was male. I am not disguising anything whatsoever. I am being profoundly accurate.
I did not suggest you were disguising anything. I do not even want to talk about you. I just dislike being accused for no good reason. And dislike it when others are so accused. Particularly when the accusers are part of a rising religion/ideology.
SigmatheZeta said:
Attempting to perceive myself as a member of the male sex makes me profoundly uncomfortable. The nearest I can come to relating it is to compare it with most men's feelings over the idea of being castrated. Something deep within me says, "Nope, so much nope."
Those facts about you have no bearing on my arguments. I would rather not talk about you, and use other examples instead, due to the obscure "misgendering" rule.
SigmatheZeta said:
I am not obligated to sacrifice my mental health over a bad faith semantic argument.
Of course you are not, but now you make make a false and unwarranted accusation against me - this one goes beyond insinuation, without the "tend to be" of the previous one.