But I DO wanna argue with our knightly friend over this:
Originally Posted by FusionKnight
It should be no surprise that men acting like women and women acting like men is generally viewed as undesirable. This is because those cases tend to dilute both masculinity and femininity, which are both necessary for a human society to thrive.
And how are men supposed to act? Women? Specific examples would be rather helpful in wrapping my mind around your stance on this. Further, it would also help if you explained in detail how a man acting out one of the female examples is detrimental to society.
You can't just say sweeping statements such as that without backing them up. That's not very INTP-like.
Alright, let me try an explain my position. I'm not really going to try and convince you that it's right, just try to describe more what I meant and maybe some reasons for it.
First of all, I see gender and sex as intimately connected. There are certain biological/physical factorss that affect gender: hormones, brain structure, etc. This is simply a fact. I'm not saying all aspects of gender are determined by biology, but it is indisputable that there is
some baseline difference between the genders based on their sex. For example, from
wiki:
"It is well established that men have a larger cerebrum than women by about 8–10% (Filipek et al., 1994; Nopoulos et al., 2000; Passe et al., 1997a,b; Rabinowicz et al., 1999; Witelson et al., 1995)." However, what is functionally relevant are differences in composition and "wiring", some of these differences are very pronounced. Richard J. Haier and colleagues at the universities of New Mexico and California (Irvine) found, using brain mapping, that men have more than six times the amount of grey matter related to general intelligence than women, and women have nearly ten times the amount of white matter related to intelligence than men.
Gray matter is used for information processing, while white matter consists of the connections between processing centers. Other differences are measurable but less pronounced. Most of these differences are known to be produced by the activity of hormones, hence ultimately derived from the Y chromosome and sexual differentiation. However, differences arising from the activity of genes directly have also been observed.
Also, I'm a Christian, so my understanding of the "intent" of creation is greatly influenced by Genesis. This means I consider the male-female paradigm to be a fundamental characteristic of the way humans were designed to be. Even if I were an evolutionist, I think I would have to come to the same conclusion, since evolution would have developed both sex and gender for specific reasons.
Because I believe that gender is a fundamental aspect of how humans were intended to exist, I also believe that evading the male-female duality is harmful and destructive, both to the individuals involved and to society in general. It's like insisting we eliminate protein from our diet. We'd do okay for awhile, but with time we'd get sicker and sicker, and eventually our body's systems would start to break down.
I think there is also some tangible real-world evidence to back up my thoughts. I'm not going to produce a big list of them unless provoked though, because my intent is not to convince anybody else that you should believe as I do. I was asked to explain, so that's what this post is.
Let me lastly be clear about what I am
not saying. I am not saying that society should force anyone into a role they are not willing to take on. Nobody should be forced into conformance with my understanding of gender, or anybody else's. As some of you know, I consider myself libertarian (or more acurately, anarcho-capitalist), so I would never advocate any forceful segregation of anybody based on any characteristic, biological or otherwise.
For example, if there were a law forbidding women to hold public office, I would be vehemently against it because it forces women to conform to a non-political role. However, if a bar-owner wanted to have a men-only bar, I would never dream of stopping him, since it doesn't force anything on anybody. By entering
his bar, you agree to abide by his rules, whatever they are. Nobody has any right to regulate someone else's private affairs, including the bar owner's.