• TotallynotJessica
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    20 hours ago

    I still don’t follow why you’re calling it an aspect of sexual preference rather than identity. It seems like you don’t really know where our understanding of the world comes from, which is important for contextualizing this conversation.

    At a fundamental, neurological level, we can never really exist in objective reality. The world is nearly infinitely complex and impossible for any mechanical process to fully grasp, so all biological thinking machines need to simplify the world to have any understanding of it. This is a fairly post modernist perspective, but not one that says objective reality doesn’t exist. Rather, I’m saying that we cannot experience the outside world based on our current understanding of neuroscience.

    We have tracked how external stimuli are not only recorded into finite chunks, but further simplified multiple times as the signal travels downstream. It’s a more efficient and lossy compression algorithm than anything we see outside of AI, which themselves copy what our brains already do.

    All this results in a troubling conclusion about science and philosophy: it is all constructed, and it always will be. Bisexuality is a category we came up with; a form to simulate external reality in our finite brains. This is true for everything, no matter how objective we think it is. Even if we had a final Grand Unified Theory of physics, it would only be an imitation made of the untouchable rules of reality.

    That is what queer theory teaches us about all attempts at understanding. The question of other kin isn’t about which group we put it into, but about why we need to put them there in the first place. How does seeing it as part of gender identities or sexual identities help us understand it? How does that understanding help us live better lives or be better to each other?

    I don’t care for this drag character, nor do I think we should waste time worrying about such people. If they act like a-holes, it says little about their identity. No identity can make up for being an inconsiderate douche-canoe, and shitty behavior can come from anyone.

    • nifty@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Rather, I’m saying that we cannot experience the outside world based on our current understanding of neuroscience.

      This is an unnecessary constraint, just because we don’t know how to fully understand or explain something yet doesn’t mean it doesn’t have a basis in reality

      • TotallynotJessica
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        16 hours ago

        The constructed simulation we live in gets constantly updated based on real world stimuli, but we often overwrite that stimuli with expectations. So long as it helps us get what we want, our perception doesn’t need to be accurate. We sometimes can’t see reality until it smacks us in the face; forcing us to accept it or die.

        It’s painful to face unfortunate realities, so we often refuse perceive them. This is not an unnecessary constraint, but a humbling truth. The only way we could ever avoid this is by becoming an omniscient god with infinite processing power.

        • nifty@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          I don’t follow how any of that even applies, but really just because you can’t face a reality doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. In fact, one’s avoidant behavior implicitly acknowledges it’s true nature.

          • TotallynotJessica
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            15 hours ago

            All arguments about definitions are about what words should mean to best serve us. All ideas work this way, especially scientific ideas. They’re all just tools, not objective or stable forms that we discover. The line between scientifically validated understandings and pseudoscience isn’t sacred, but constantly in flux. This isn’t a fault of science, but its greatest strength. We only make progress by testing limits and attempting to falsify what we assume to be true.

            Using science to exclude other kin from gender identity overestimates our knowledge. I don’t personally think it’s just a part of gender identity, but related to some other aspect of identity. At the same time, science is barely starting to understand gender, and currently knows almost nothing about nonbinary identities.

            There is no scientific explanation for drag, so anything we come up with is total conjecture. As a result, we should just accept our ignorance for now and move on. Doing otherwise is denying the limits to our knowledge.

            • nifty@lemmy.world
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              14 hours ago

              Yes, science is a tool, and it’s a tool for getting towards a fundamental truth or basis of reality.

              Otherkin don’t need to be a part of gender identity to be accepted.

              Species are species, species are not different genders.

              We don’t know currently how to change someone into another species, but maybe someday we might. We also don’t currently have any understanding or consensus of how to define a dragon or make people into one, but maybe someday we might.

              Tbh, I don’t care if someone gets hormonal or genetic therapy to change into whatever they want or identify as, but by definition other kin is not part of a gender.

              That’s not gatekeeping, I am simply saying words like cat, tiger or dragon etc are not genders.

              • TotallynotJessica
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                13 hours ago

                You might be right, but it is gatekeeping, and that argument itself isn’t an argument I give much merit. People don’t need hormones to transition, nor do they need to change their bodies. A consensus for gender isn’t something that often works in our favor, even for binary trans folks like me.

                The way we characterize species is wack. The whole origin of species is that we like to categorize. Evolution doesn’t care about our classifications; only that the organisms can continue replicating. Classifications are just mental boxes that serve a purpose, not anything real. There is no spoon except in our mind.

                Like I said, I suspect there is something more to other kin than gender, as they might be simply using the only language they have available. If there is to be another way to define them, it must come from them. When cishets try to categorize trans people, they often use the categories to constrain us, so I’ll let the other kin handle how they’re defined. Living without having a perfect way of labeling them is hard, but I won’t be part of efforts to force them into a box.

                Science can get us closer to fundamental truth, but like the speed of light, it isn’t something we have any hope of reaching.