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GENDER AND SEX

Gendered Behavior

Gendered Behavior

At a young age, children learn and copy perceived a lot of gendered behavior, which in many cases leads to the limiting of children’s expression. This doesn’t necessarily prove that all gendered norms have a firm basis in nurture, that’s something that this doc hasn’t adequately addressed yet.

Note: this section is really in need of a rehaul, it isn’t necessarily representative of the general science here and it’s also vague on how much of gendered norms are nurtured as opposed to natured.


They/Them Pronouns

They/Them Pronouns

Singular “they” is grammatically correct


Sex is Not Binary

Sex is Not Binary

Modern science endorses a bimodal model in its understanding of sex


Gender and Sex are Different

Gender and Sex are Different

Modern science also recognizes an important distinction between gender and sex. .

Whether or not “gender” and “sex” are distinct basically depends entirely on how we define those ideas in the first place.

  Quote
National Institute of Health (NIH) [2] [3] Understanding sex and gender is critical to understanding human health and disease. Although “sex” is often incorrectly thought to have the same meaning as “gender,” the terms describe different but connected constructs. Sex and gender shape health independently as distinct factors, as well as interactively through the many ways in which they intersect and influence each other.
American Psychological Association Sex is assigned at birth, refers to one’s biological status as either male or female, and is associated primarily with physical attributes such as chromosomes, hormone prevalence, and external and internal anatomy. Gender refers to the socially constructed roles, behaviors, activities, and attributes that a given society considers appropriate for boys and men or girls and women. These influence the ways that people act, interact, and feel about themselves. While aspects of biological sex are similar across different cultures, aspects of gender may differ.
National Health Service (NHS) Gender identity refers to our sense of who we are and how we see and describe ourselves. Most people identify as “male” or “female”. These are sometimes called “binary” identities. But some people feel their gender identity is different from their biological sex. For example, some people may have male genitals and facial hair but do not identify as a male or feel masculine. Some may have female genitals and breasts but do not identify as a female or feel feminine.
Stanford University Sex and gender interact: The term gender was introduced in the late 1960s to reject biological determinism that interprets behavioral differences as the outcomes of biological disposition. “Gender” was used to distinguish the sociocultural factors that shape behaviors and attitudes from biological factors related to sex. Gendered behaviors and attitudes are learned; they are neither fixed nor universal. Gendered experiences can affect biology. Moreover, some individuals seek to change aspects of their bodies to align them better with their gender identities. Sex and gender are often useful analytical terms even if in reality sex and gender interact (see Method: Analyzing how Sex and Gender Interact).
World Health Organization (WHO) Gender interacts with but is different from sex, which refers to the different biological and physiological characteristics of females, males and intersex persons, such as chromosomes, hormones and reproductive organs. Gender and sex are related to but different from gender identity. Gender identity refers to a person’s deeply felt, internal and individual experience of gender, which may or may not correspond to the person’s physiology or designated sex at birth.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Sex refers to a set of biological attributes in humans and animals. It is primarily associated with physical and physiological features including chromosomes, gene expression, hormone levels and function, and reproductive/sexual anatomy. … Gender refers to the socially constructed roles, behaviours, expressions and identities of girls, women, boys, men, and gender diverse people. It influences how people perceive themselves and each other, how they act and interact, and the distribution of power and resources in society.
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists For the purposes of clarity, sex is defined as the presence of specific anatomy or chromosomes. Gender is a social construct, made up of attitudes, feelings, and behaviors that a culture associates with either males or females; terminology often varies by geographic region, culture, and individual preference.

Logical points to keep in mind:

An analogy to help explain the distinction between gender and sex, with a focus on age (complementing biological sex in that it’s more concrete and unchangeable) and maturity (complementing gender identity in that it’s socially constructed):


Gender in the Past

Gender in the Past

We didn’t always hold the same attitudes or use the same terminology for genders that we do now.


Gender Across Cultures

Gender Across Cultures

A substantial number of cultures have had and/or continue to have non-binary, gender-fluid, or third gender identities within their gender constructs.


Gender Equality Paradox

Gender Equality Paradox

Gender essentialists claim that gender differences in career choice remain even in highly egalitarian countries - named the gender equality paradox. This claim is founded on a poor study which the academic community rejects and ridicules. See the wikipedia page**

Additional Resources:


Addressing Misconceptions about Gender and Sex

Addressing Misconceptions about Gender and Sex

1. “But sex is determined by chromosomes! XX for women and XY for men.”

What about people with XXX, or XYY, or other combinations? These people do exist. The XX/XY dichotomy doesn’t include these people, and thus does not reflect the real world fully and accurately. The XX/XY dichotomy is still useful for everyday use as it includes most people, but if we’re looking for accuracy over convenience, we can’t ignore those who have uncommon chromosome sets.

2. “Intersex people are too uncommon to be relevant, so they don’t count.”

The frequency of intersex people is unclear for a number of reasons (opening up for a wide range of estimates), but let’s settle for a broad definition: “people whose bodies differ from standard male or female”. The Intersex Society of North America (linked earlier) suggests that this applies to 1 in every 100 births. While that may seem like a small number at first, if we scale that up to all of humanity we end up with nearly 80 million people. That’s larger than most countries are - certainly not an insignificant number.

Other estimates go even higher, going up to 2% of births - that’s about as common as red haired people are globally, or how common Jews are in the US population.

It’s important to emphasize that intersex is not just defined by one trait like ambiguous genitalia, but is rather defined by a broader grouping of abnormal sex characteristics. Some of the lower range estimates may have only considered one or two traits rather than expand their scope to account for the whole range of intersex people. As quoted from here, “Some groups use an old prevalence statistic that says we make up 1 in 2000, or .05%, percent of the population, but that statistic refers to one specific intersex trait, ambiguous genitalia, which is but one of many variations which, combined (as they are in medical diagnostics and coding), constitute the 1.7% estimate by esteemed Professor of Biology and Gender Studies, Anne Fausto-Sterling, of Brown University*. A similar, slightly higher, statistic was also reported in, “How Sexually Dimorphic Are We?”, by Blackless, et al, in The American Journal of Human Biology.

Even if intersex people only make up a fraction of a % of all people, that still doesn’t mean that we can just ignore them - to give an example, Jews for example make up around 0.2% of the world population, but nobody says that Judaism is somehow “not a religion” or that it shouldn’t be accounted for in a religious analysis of society.

3. “Intersex people are all infertile, so they don’t count.”

Infertility doesn’t automatically exclude you from being of a sex or etc - for example, many women struggle with infertility (though it is a somewhat vague term) yet we don’t consider those women to not be women or to not be of any sex.

Regardless, not all intersex people are sterile, and in fact plenty of intersex people end up going through forced sterilization during their lifetimes, implying that they were not sterilized prior to going through the forced sterilization process.

4. “Can you name all the genders? If not, your take is invalid.”

This question is a bit dishonest. It’s like taking a color wheel and asking for a number for how many colors there are.

Gender as a concept (socially constructed and something which varies based on the specific person) is comparable to emotions and personalities. Basically, there’s ways to express yourself which are basically qualitative, not quantitative - emotions and personalities, and of course, gender. How many emotions exist? How many personalities? There is no true answer to how many personalities exist or how many emotions exist. These are qualitative ideas, just like gender.

Yes, people do try to categorize ideas like emotions and personalities, just as people categorize gender. Here’s an emotion color wheel which does just that. This doesn’t mean that there is a fixed number of emotions or personalities.

This comparison is further strengthened by the role they all play in personal identity. Personalities, emotions, gender, etc all have a role in shaping who you are as a person and how you interact with the world around you.

If you’re confused about how the word “gender” is being used in this context, you might want to see “Gender and Sex are Different” section of this webpage for clarification. “Gender” is being used to refer to the socially constructed and cultural side of the coin, while “sex” refers more strictly to the biological side of the coin.

5. “Gender and sex are basically the same thing because they have a correlative or causative relationship, or because they’re intertwined, etc.”

Gender and sex are very obviously connected to each other, but being related to each other doesn’t make them literally the same thing. You could say that education and income have a causative connection - people with higher education levels are more able to reach well paying jobs as they’re more qualified for them - but that doesn’t mean that education and income are the same thing.

In fact, the idea that “sex determines your gender” already assumes that assumes gender and sex are two distinct things, that this one distinct thing determines this other distinct thing - this completely undermines the idea that they’re the same.

6. “Men are men and women are women. That means a man can’t be a woman nor vice versa.”

“Men are men and women are women” is tautological and therefore meaningless. It’s like saying “the sky is the sky and blue is blue”, it doesn’t really mean anything.

Someone using this argument might then clarify “what I’m trying to say is that it’s impossible to change the sex you’re born as”. The problem is that trans people are not changing their sex, they are changing their gender. This usually loops the conversation back to whether or not there’s a gender-sex distinction, which in turn is addressed in the “Gender and Sex are Different” section of this webpage.

7. Other things WIP