While more conclusive experimental data in support of the thesis presented is desirable, two recent publications have appeared that amplify and review much of the material discussed above, a paper entitled “Evidence Supporting the Biologic Nature of Gender Identity” and Bevan’s book with the title “The Psychobiology of Transsexualism and Transgenderism” (Bevan, 2015; Saraswat, Weinand, & Safer, 2015). To this investigator there seems evidence enough to consider trans persons as individuals intersexed in their brains and scant evidence to think their gender transition is a simple and unwarranted social choice.
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Tuesday, 3 January 2017
Transsexualism as an Intersex Condition
4 comments:
Anonymous commenters - please add a signature (doesn't have to be your real name) on each post of yours. Anne O'Namus, Norm D. Ploom, Angry from Kent, Demosthenes, or even your real initials, it doesn't matter.
Commenters are expected to be polite to each other, but the same standard doesn't apply to comments regarding me.
Australian commenters are very very strongly advised to publish anonymously. Sydney alone has more defamation actions than the entire USA and UK. Nearly double that of the UK in fact.
As Google does not reliably inform me that a comment has been posted, and I have no control over first publication, I assert that all comments are innocently disseminated under the NSW DEFAMATION ACT 2005 - SECT 32 and similar acts.
I'm a bit confused by this - I totally agree, from everything I've read and trans people I've known, that it's nothing to do with social choice - but it's the "intersexed in their brains" phrase that's confusing me.
ReplyDeleteA quick google says that "intersex" is about physical sexual or gender characteristics that don't fit the standard male/female definitions. It seems a strange description for e.g. a kid with a girl's body and chromosomes who says from age 4 to 24 "I'm a boy" - in kind of the same way that it would be strange to call Kinsey-6 gay people "bisexual in their brain." I'd think that kid is male in his brain, not "intersexed."
Or am I overthinking this?
I think that "intersexed in their brains" is suggesting that the neuroanatomy, organization, structure and cerebral activation patterns all point to the sexual differentiation of the brains varying from the gonads in some individuals.
ReplyDeleteAlso note that the author is dealing with a broader group than your example : "A strict dichotomy between male and female may not occur; the shift between the sexes/genders may be partial and the individual left with feeling somewhat both male and female. This same individual might also feel female or male under different circumstances or at different times." (See the referenced work)
Chris Phoenix: See
ReplyDeleteMale–to–female transsexuals have female neuron numbers in a limbic nucleus. Kruiver et al J Clin Endocrinol Metab (2000) 85:2034–2041
The present findings of somatostatin neuronal sex differences in the BSTc and its sex reversal in the transsexual brain clearly support the paradigm that in transsexuals sexual differentiation of the brain and genitals may go into opposite directions
I guess I'd have described that as "intersexed between brain and gonads" rather than "intersexed in their brains." The latter phrase sounds to me like it's saying every transsexual person is in-between (as Zoe points out some are).
ReplyDeleteI guess I didn't like the description because I worried that it might strengthen the (harmful, invalid, all-too-common) it's-a-choice argument.