I read the first two articles and found that the first one helped me more than it helped you
One potential reason for this difficulty may be that our evolutionary history has shaped the human mind in ways that tend to perpetuate intergroup conflict. The male warrior hypothesis argues that, for men, intergroup conflict represents an opportunity to gain access to mates, territory and increased status, and this may have created selection pressures for psychological mechanisms to initiate and display acts of intergroup aggression.
and likewise with the second article.
The results for sociosexuality were most consistent with a hybrid model—that both biological and social structural influences contribute to sex differences
constitute strong evidence that evolved biological dispositions underlie these sex differences—dispositionsthat show through the ‘‘noise’’ of cultural variations
For example, girls often show greater variability in their preferences for sex-typed toys than boys do (Zucker, 2005). Sex differences in trait variability could result from both biological factors (e.g., sexual selection) and environmental factors (stronger cultural influences on one sex than the other).
Baumeister (2000) presented evidence suggesting that women’s sexual behaviors tend to be more variable, flexible, and subject to social and cultural influences than men’s, whereas men’s sexual behaviors tend to be morerigid, inflexible, and channeled by biological urges than women’s.
Superimposed on this biological ‘‘main effect’’ are cultural influences, which affect women’s sociosexuality more than men’s
The observed crossover effect was consistent with the hybrid model’s prediction that men’s and women’s biological predispositions interact with ‘‘cultural presses’’ to influence the variability of men’s and women’s sociosexuality differently across cultures.
Regression analyses explored the power of sex, gender equality, and their interaction to predict men's and women's 106 national trait means for each of the four traits. Only sex predicted means for all four traits, and sex predicted trait means much more strongly than did gender equality or the interaction between sex and gender equality. These results suggest that biological factors may contribute to sex differences in personality and that culture plays a negligible to small role in moderating sex differences in personality.
levels of occupational sex segregation are only weakly predicted by economic development, and cultural modernity often coincides with more, not less, sex segregation overall (Roos 1985, Charles 1992, Jacobs & Lim 1992, Blackburn et al. 2000). In fact, some of the highest levels of occupational sex segregation are found in reputably egalitarian Scandinavian countries, such as Sweden.
preferences of autonomous men and women. Sex segregation of college majors, caring occupations, and domestic work is widely presumed to reflect self-selection—and self-expression—by formally equal but innately different men and women.
Previous research suggested that sex differences in personality traits are larger in prosperous, healthy, and egalitarian cultures in which women have more opportunities equal with those of men. In this article, the authors report cross-cultural findings in which this unintuitive result was replicated across samples from 55 nations (N = 17,637). On responses to the Big Five Inventory, women reported higher levels of neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, and conscientiousness than did men across most nations. These findings converge with previous studies in which different Big Five measures and more limited samples of nations were used. Overall, higher levels of human development--including long and healthy life, equal access to knowledge and education, and economic wealth--were the main nation-level predictors of larger sex differences in personality.
And it has fuck all to do with biology.
QuoteOne potential reason for this difficulty may be that our evolutionary history has shaped the human mind in ways that tend to perpetuate intergroup conflict. The male warrior hypothesis argues that, for men, intergroup conflict represents an opportunity to gain access to mates, territory and increased status, and this may have created selection pressures for psychological mechanisms to initiate and display acts of intergroup aggression.
Honestly it doesn't seem as if you've read them at all.
There isn't a single thing about the definition of gender that precludes biological explanations, at all.
You have to admit though that biology does have a certain degree of influence on how most people portray gender.
>potential>may>hypothesisThese words should not inspire a particularly high degree of confidence within you.
What, just because I don't accept it, that means I didn't read them?
I don't automatically accept everything that I read on the Internet, and neither should you.
This basic idea that there's more to sex than just penises and vaginas, and that gender is something else entirely.
I'd like to just point out, too, that this argument is pure semantics.
I see no purpose in conflating biological sex and gender identity. It only serves to muddy the waters further.
Which is a completely unwarranted assumption. How many academic studies have you actually tried to find which confirms this explanation of gender you've been given your whole life?
Nobody's conflating anything. Sex = A purely biological, chromosomal configuration.Gender = Self-perception with regards to either masculine or feminine traits.The question is how much, if at all, the latter is driven by biology.
Positing that the latter is driven by biology would be conflation of the two things.
If gender isn't at least partially determinable by biology(brain chemistry maybe, or even the influence of hormones on in utero brain developement) how is it that you get individuals with gender dysphoria?
If I agree to this partition, the content of the debate doesn't really change. It just shifts from our original question to "Are the differences we see in behaviour chiefly the result of sex or gender", using your definitions. It seems pretty clear to me that biology and (evolutionary) psychology has answered this question, and the answer is sex.
Quote from: le peanut butter man xd on September 10, 2015, 04:33:54 PMIf gender isn't at least partially determinable by biology(brain chemistry maybe, or even the influence of hormones on in utero brain developement) how is it that you get individuals with gender dysphoria?That's like asking if fire is hot, why does it burn shit? Like... come the fuck on.
No longer would anyone be able to make vapid appeals to nature with regards to how people should be treated, or how people should be expected to behave, based solely on their biological sex
Nevertheless, people oughtn't do that anyway. You don't need to hope gender is one way or the other in order to call somebody a fucking cunt for forcing his wife to be the "homemaker". Even if gender identity are (largely) biological and innate, that's no justification for treating women are more or less respectfully. It's just a case of cunts will be cunts.
So you're saying it is at least partially determinable by biology. Which is what I was attempting to show.I'm sorry, I seem to have been under the delusion that this thread was about people that believe gender was totally separated from biology. Which is like conceding that fire burns stuff and then denying that it's hot.
Quote from: Executioner Sigma on September 10, 2015, 05:27:10 PMNevertheless, people oughtn't do that anyway. You don't need to hope gender is one way or the other in order to call somebody a fucking cunt for forcing his wife to be the "homemaker". Even if gender identity are (largely) biological and innate, that's no justification for treating women are more or less respectfully. It's just a case of cunts will be cunts.Right—but I'm saying it would be even less of a justification.Did you read my articles, or are you in the process, or what? I'm going over the last couple articles you posted right now.Quote from: le peanut butter man xd on September 10, 2015, 05:22:20 PMSo you're saying it is at least partially determinable by biology. Which is what I was attempting to show.I'm sorry, I seem to have been under the delusion that this thread was about people that believe gender was totally separated from biology. Which is like conceding that fire burns stuff and then denying that it's hot.Right, yeah, and Karl Benz is responsible for 30,000 American deaths per year, because without him, there wouldn't be any automobiles. Sure. Fair logic.clearly everything about life is rooted in biology, in the sense that even social constructs are created by a biological apparatus called a "brain"that's not the issue
You do realize I was only responding to the op, which was about people that claim gender is totally separated from biology. I never implied that's what you were saying.
Quote from: le peanut butter man xd on September 10, 2015, 05:41:03 PMYou do realize I was only responding to the op, which was about people that claim gender is totally separated from biology. I never implied that's what you were saying.I'm one of those people, though. Except nobody actually believes gender is totally separated from biology—I've yet to meet one. What most people on my side argue is that gender is influenced by societal expectations and environmental factors (your upbringing & conditioning) FAR more than it is dictated by any negligible biological factors. To the point where you may as well not even bring biology up, and instead say, "these are SEX characteristics."
Did you read my articles, or are you in the process, or what?
so what