onesteptwostep
Junior Hegelian
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- Dec 7, 2014
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It's a long stretch, but I was thinking how certain trangenders employ the phrase 'I identify as' before saying what they are. And it made me think, identity is literally an identity for them, that the category of "I identify as..." is literally an identity for them. Now, see that I have used the plural "they" to refer to them, which is grammatically correct. Now add to that certain transgenders who wish to be called they or them. See where I'm going with this?
Ideologically speaking, a trans person is transcending the particular to emcompass the multitude of identity, and in essense elevating themselves to an universal, that is, that there is a multitude of identities.
In other words they think they are not human but some kind of philsophical impossibility like a squared circle, and demand respect- a particular cannot be a universal, and a universal cannot he a particular. Deities demanded respect for similar reasons, because they were immortal, or something of the sort, an impossibility.
On a theologic-philosophic note, Jesus is the only one to have claimed that he was a particular but also a universal, a philosophic impossibility. So on a platonic level trans ideology is just humans trying to be as impossibilities, which in the olden days was a kind of prerequisite for being an object of worship. Anyway just a little mental doodle with the ideology. I haven't read any trans ideology but I feel like that's what it is in the context of western philosophy. I could probably go on for hours about this.
Ideologically speaking, a trans person is transcending the particular to emcompass the multitude of identity, and in essense elevating themselves to an universal, that is, that there is a multitude of identities.
In other words they think they are not human but some kind of philsophical impossibility like a squared circle, and demand respect- a particular cannot be a universal, and a universal cannot he a particular. Deities demanded respect for similar reasons, because they were immortal, or something of the sort, an impossibility.
On a theologic-philosophic note, Jesus is the only one to have claimed that he was a particular but also a universal, a philosophic impossibility. So on a platonic level trans ideology is just humans trying to be as impossibilities, which in the olden days was a kind of prerequisite for being an object of worship. Anyway just a little mental doodle with the ideology. I haven't read any trans ideology but I feel like that's what it is in the context of western philosophy. I could probably go on for hours about this.