@Robot Parade Leader I… don’t think you’ve been reading. The self-fertilization thing was leapt upon by feelotraveller as… some example of MaxSpin trying to stealth disseminate a hitherto unrevealed political ideology, and it’s a semantic argument about what the word “impossible” means, and pedantry over how MaxSpin is describing that.
Max also, as you quoted, was talking from a biological perspective, not social or whatever, which he again clearly stated at the end of the post you quoted, didn’t link to, and trimmed. Who was moving goalposts, again?
The rest of it are things folk asked Mathel about, because Mathel’s position is ridiculously reductive.
Edit: didn’t actually notice feelotraveller’s response.
You linked to the Ovetesticular syndrome wikipedia page, which says:
In the past, ovotesticular syndrome was referred to as true hermaphroditism, which is considered outdated as of 2006. The term "true hermaphroditism" was considered incredibly misleading by many medical organizations and by many advocacy groups, as hermaphroditism refers to a species that produces both sperm and ova, something that is impossible in humans.
Emphasis mine.
I’m curious why you are continuing to say that biologists are saying it’s possible when your own sources say the opposite.
Further to that, there is doubt to the suggestion self-fertilization is possible in humans.
Firstly that comment refers to hermaphrodism as a species property where all members of the species possess both sperm and ova, something that is clearly not the case for the human species.
Secondly the term hermaphrodism was firmly entrenched in the scientific literature as a result of a Victorian age legacy. The standard classification (Klebs) for a long time was a five sex model: females, males, female pseudohermaphrodites, male pseudohermaphrodites and true hermaphrodites. The latter classification was based on the presentation of at least one ovary and one testis or at least one ovotestis without regard to the production of either ova or sperm. So scientifically the use of the term was incorrect when most of the people so classified produced neither sperm or ova.
If you look further down the page cited you will find the bit I quoted about self-fertilisation. And yes the scientific word on it is still out, maybe forever, but the point I was making is that nothing we currently know biologically precludes it, at least in theory, and in contradiction of what MS was saying.
Edit: No, you have not shown that it is 'impossible' or even the clarification 'effectively impossible'. You have asserted this on the back of nothing. Biology as a discipline does indeed consider it possible, for now, although not documented.
To be clear, it's "theoretically possible" in that it could be possible for an extremely unlikely combination of hundreds of mutations to completely change the sex development system in such a way that both could be functional at the same time. This has never happened and it's never going to happen.
So you've gone from 'impossible' to 'effectively impossible' to 'theoretically possible... but never going to happen'. Point of fact: you don't know (and neither do I) that it has 'never happened'.
But saying 'impossible' wasn't a lie, right, and definitely not couched to be a neutral 'fact' for political purposes either.
I’m sorry, what political ideology is being stealth-touted by saying human self-fertilization is impossible?
There have been zero reported cases of self-fertilization in humans, and only one reported case of self-fertilization in mammals. Scientists won’t say something is impossible unless it is provably so.
I’m not sure what the point is in arguing the semantics of this, beyond your distaste for MaxSpin.
The political ideology being touted has little to do with self-fertilisation but everything to do with MS making out that you are biologically determined to be either a man or a woman:
I just want to clarify that sex is extremely well-defined in biology because mammalian sexual development is "canalized", meaning that it is unable to develop ambiguously because of mutually exclusive systems.
"Intersex", in turn, is an outdated term for people who definitely have one sex or the other, but whose sex may not be obvious from external observation due to developmental differences
The self-fertilisation stuff is peripheral but its relevance is that there is nothing that biologically precludes a given person from producing both viable sperm and ova at the same time.
In other words the (false) biological reductionism to procreative function does indeed serve a political purpose.
What is that political purpose? I get that conservatives use the sex binary argument to support their desire to oppress transfolk, but that doesn’t mean every instance of the argument “sex is binary” is supporting that position.
What false biological reductionism? I quote Wikipedia later on this.
Regardless, whether or not Max is mistaken about this doesn’t mean he’s mistaken about the rest of what he says, nor does it mean he’s making a political statement. I think you’re just focusing on one, quite frankly irrelevant part of the argument, but for why, I don’t know.
Assuming you are interested you might find these interesting. I won't bother to summarise.
https://web.archive.org/web/20161220154642/http://www.aissg.org/PDFs/Dreger-Nomenclature-2005.PDF
https://www.gimjournal.org/article/S1098-3600(21)03508-5/fulltext
Preedit: Robot Parade Leader just posting while I was writing and I haven't read that yet.
Neither of those two things have anything to do with what MaxSpin said though? Indeed, what he said gels with what those links say: intersex is outdated, use differences in sexual development instead. Unless your issue is with using the terms “male” and “female”?
I mean, take the wikipedia page on the
sex-gender distinction:
Biologists
Anisogamy, or the size differences of gametes (sex cells), is the defining feature of the two sexes.[26][27][28][29] According to biologist Michael Majerus there is no other universal difference between males and females.[30]
By definition, males are organisms that produce small, mobile gametes (sperm); while females are organisms that produce large and generally immobile gametes (ova or eggs).[31][32][33][34] Richard Dawkins stated that it is possible to interpret all the differences between the sexes as stemming from this single difference in gametes.[35]
Bhargava et al. note that the terms sex and gender are not, and should not be used as, interchangeable terms. They state that "sex is dichotomous, with sex determination in the fertilized zygote stemming from unequal expression of sex chromosomal genes." In contrast, gender is seen as including "perception of the individual as male, female, or other, both by the individual and by society".[36] The authors differentiate between sex differences, caused by biological factors, and gender differences, which "reflect a complex interplay of psychological, environmental, cultural, and biological factors".[14] Gender identity is thus seen as a "psychological concept that refers to an individual's self-perception".[14]
Other studies have noted that, while there is some tentative evidence for a potential genetic, neuroanatomical, and hormonal basis for gender identity, the specific biological mechanisms involved have not yet been demonstrated.
So biologists are saying that sex is male or female, and there’s no other universal difference between male and female beyond gametes.
I did also find
this but I’m not paying £50 to read it.
I found it from
here and the person that linked it quoted from it it’s unlikely sperm production and egg production both occurred at the same time. I think that also gels with what Max said.