philiminal

transgender

The Clitoris: Why Earp Doesn’t Hit the Spot

What’s more fitting than to destroy an old word, a vicious and corrupt word that has done much harm in its day and is now obsolete? The word ‘feminist’ is the word indicated. – Virginia Woolf, Three Guineas

Brian Earp has just put up a really nice clip on YouTube (‘What is (Your) Gender?), which is his attempt to offer solutions for how progress might be made in the #genderwars on the left.

I like Brian, and I like his video. I like Brian and his video despite disagreeing with, and even being a little bit offended by, Brian's defence of conversion therapy for same-sex attracted persons under some circumstances (I prefer Aas and Delmas on this issue).[1] I also appreciate his attempt to try, through this clip, to take some the heat out of a debate which has become extremely toxic for multiple disadvantaged groups (and multiply disadvantaged persons) in academic #philosophy.

In general i like the approach to the problem that Brian sketches in this clip and what he's trying to do. I take him to be attempting to move away from the tendency for both sides in the debate to be all encompassing and rather context independent. There are a few things, however, that I don't think Brian has got quite right, or that I think he's a little too optimistic about. This is the first of a series of posts on each of those things.

Let’s start with the clitoris.

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When Brian talks about genitals, he claims that we all have what he calls a ‘cliteropenis’. This is the first time I've heard this word used for all genitalia, rather than genitalia that is not determinatively a clitoris or a penis, as with some differences in sexual development/intersex variations that influence a person's genitalia.

Brian states that the length of this organ (the clitoropenis), differs and clusters into two main groups:

“If you have a long version of this organ we call it, by convention, a 'penis', and if you have a short version we call it, by convention, a 'clitoris'”

I think what Brian means to refer to here is how long or short the external or visible part of the organ is, because the clitoris and the penis are actually approximately the same size on average; it’s just that most of the clitoris is not visible, like an iceberg. So any measurement would have to be in relation to the external part of the organ only, if this variable was to be in any sense a meaningful contribution to the upshot of Brian’s account, which is that we can all position ourselves in some sort of 'multi-dimensional gender space'.

But I see three important problems with Earp's proposal.

  1. Encouraging us to think of this organ as essentially the same organ rather than >2 different organs threatens a return to our predominately-penised past.

  2. Genitals have important differences and those differences are not random or arbitrary or inconsequential. Our knowledge or lack of knowledge about these differences can lead to inequalities in health outcomes and sexual satisfaction, among other things. Those with penises have fared better so far vis-a-vis those with clitorises, given the enormous ratio of research done on penises vis-a-vis clitorises; we should avoid similar problems in the future by making sure we do not inappropriately conflate and/or centre clitorises and penises at the expense of people who have genitals that are not determinatively either organ.

  3. Using size as a variable and plotting this feature on a two-dimensional spectrum has problematic consequences. It has the upshot of marking those with longer penises to be more male and/or masculine (and male persons with shorter penises to be more feminine/woman-ish/female-like than males with longer penises), and those with shorter clitorises to be more female and/or feminine (and female persons with longer clitorises to be more masculine/men-ish/male-like than females with longer penises). This only serves to further entrench already present social anxieties.

I'll expand on these points roughly in turn below.


A clitoris is not a 'little penis'

It's true that our genitals, no matter which ones we end up with, all evolve from the same embryonic structure, the genital tubercle. Structures that share an evolutionary or developmental ancestry in this way are called 'homologues' by biologists. It's also true that there is broad agreement among scientists that there are no systematic differences between the genital tubercles of those embryos that will eventually come to have a penis, and those that will eventually come to have a clitoris or another sex organ, until about the 9-10 week mark. At this point, what was the genital tubercle undergoes differentiation in response to the presence or absence of androgens, and development of this organ generally diverges along one of two key and very different pathways (but in rare cases diverges down others).

What's not clear, is why after all of these chemical reactions and changes, we have good reasons to think that what we still have at the end of that process is essentially the same organ as we started with?

I don't think we do.

I think we have material and moral reasons to recognise >2 distinct sex organs, and to use distinct language for these organs. Words matter. They shape and mould our ideas and beliefs, and others' ideas and beliefs, about our bodies. And that itself matters, as the history of medicine with respect to the clitoris shows, and why feminists, for the longest time now, have admonished researchers that a clitoris is not a ‘little penis’.

Now Brian might reply at this point that he's not saying a clitoris is a little penis; he's saying that a clitoris is a little cliteropenis and that a penis is a big cliteropenis. But does this attempt at a sort of neutrality work, or does it have, or will it likely have, pernicious unintended consequences?

Notice that Brian chose to call it a 'cliteropenis' and not a 'clitoris-penis', 'penis-clitoris' or 'penoclitoris', etc. Cliteropenis still makes it sound, to my mind, like the clitoris is a type of penis – a clitero one. The structure of this word continues to centre the penis and view female and other bodies through the male lens; it will not, in most people's minds, lead them to thinking of the clitoris and penis as just 'the same', which seems to be Brian's hope.

But it shouldn't be our hope because the history of medicine shows us that humans have conflated the penis and the clitoris (and other sex organs) in the past and this conflation resulted in unjust and undesirable consequences for subordinately situated persons (in the examples I provide from history below, persons with clitorises). We should avoid moves that do the same. We should not think that penises, clitorises, and the sex organs persons with variations that influence the anatomy of their genitalia, are 'the same'.


The long history of penis-izing clitorises

Since its first historic mention, the clitoris has almost always been spoken about with reference to the penis, and often as if it doesn't exhibit any significant difference to it.

Claudius Galen, a doctor in the Roman Empire between 130-200 AD stated that:

“...all the parts, then, that men have, women have too, the difference between them lying in only one thing, namely, that in women the parts are within, whereas in men they are outside.”

Similarly, in 1844, German anatomist George Ludwig Kobelt conducted a study of the clitoris with the aim of demonstrating that “the female possesses a structure that in all its separate parts is entirely analogous to the male” (my emphasis).

Even today, the U.S. National Library of Medicine defines the clitoris as homologous with the penis, but it does not define the penis as homologous with the clitoris.

This perpetuates the powerful myth that the existence of female and body parts, and the body parts of persons of sexes other than male more broadly, depend on the validation provided by the existence, understanding, and recognition of male body parts.

Conceptualizing the clitoris as being essentially 'no different' to the penis discouraged society from obtaining a greater understanding of it. Studies of historical anatomical textbooks have shown that depictions of the clitoris were significantly limited and often omitted completely. In 1947 it was even erased from the 25th edition of Gray’s Anatomy by its editor at the time, Dr. Charles Mayo Goss. In 1981 the Federation of Feminist Women's Health Clinics created more anatomically accurate images of the clitoris and published them in A New View of a Woman’s Body. But it wasn't until 1998 that the external and internal anatomy of the clitoris was mapped by Australian urologist Helen O’Connell, demonstrating its immense size and innervation, and challenging nearly every belief about clitoral anatomy to date.

O’Connell was partly motivated to study the clitoris when she noticed that when male persons undergo procedures like prostate surgery, they're hooked up to a myriad of machines and devices designed to keep surgeons far away from the nerve endings of male sexual anatomy. She wondered why there was no equivalent to help protect the female sexual anatomy during surgery? Without these precautions, how could doctors know they weren’t cutting into clitoral nerves during routine procedures like hysterectomies?

The article about O'Connell linked to above underscores that ignorance about the clitoris persists today, including amongst medics, researchers and sex educators. As the University of Western Sydney clinician and physiotherapy researcher Jane Chalmers explains, the subject of the clitoris is still avoided or ignored. “Several major medical textbooks omit the clitoris, or label it on diagrams but have no description of it as an organ,” she says. “This is in great contrast to the penis that is always covered in-depth in these texts.” Considering the fact that clitoral pain (as well as infections, inflammation, and disease) are quite common, Chalmers contends that better understanding of the clitoris is essential. She adds that as the clitoris is closely tied to the sexual pleasure of those who possess them, the lack of knowledge about the clitoris amplifies sexual inequalities between those with penises and those with clitorises and other sex organs.

Progress may not even have stalled so much as worsened. In a 2014 article in PLoS One Biology titled Genital Evolution: Why Are Females Still Understudied?, gender studies scholar and evolutionary biologist Malin Ah-King and colleagues conducted an analysis of the literature which showed that research exploring genitalia exhibited a “strong male bias” which has “worsened since 2000, despite the fact that this bias has been explicitly pointed out in the past.” Whilst researchers often protest that this is simply because male genitalia is larger and therefore more ’accessible’, Ah-King et al. argue that the persisting male bias in these studies cannot be explained solely by anatomical sex differences that influence accessibility. Rather, they argue that the bias reflects “enduring assumptions about the dominant role of males in sex, and invariant female genitalia.” A 2005 article in the Journal of Urology by O'Connor and colleagues concurs: “The anatomy of the clitoris has not been stable with time as would be expected. To a major extent its study has been dominated by social factors.”

Some of the worst effects of the analogizing of clitorises with penises and not treating them as separate organs has been that the clitoris came not to be seen as simply 'the same' as the penis, but an inferior version of it. The male body and organs came to be viewed as the ultimate ideal, and female bodies and organs simply fell short of this perfection. This encouraged contempt of, rather than indifference to, the clitoris. When the first dissection of a clitoris was conducted in 1545, Charles Estienne called the clitoris women's “shameful member.”

Freud viewed the clitoris as a such a pitiful version the penis that he came up with the idea that the: “Elimination of clitoral sexuality is a necessary precondition for the development of femininity...since it is immature and masculine in its nature.”

He urged women to undergo a transition in their sexuality from their clitoris, to their vagina:

“With the change to femininity the clitoris should wholly or in part hand over its sensitivity, and at the same time its importance, to the vagina”

Freud's false beliefs (of both descriptive and evaluative kinds) and his normative advice, was almost universally adopted for decades by health practitioners, researchers and sex educators. And female persons today are still robbed of orgasms by cultures of sex and sexuality that neglect the clitoris, and over-emphasize the vagina (thanks to philosophers like Elizabeth Lloyd, artists and progressive sex educators, there has been huge progress in much scholarly and popular culture, at least, in breaking that misconception down).

But to be fair, and also to illustrate how patriarchy works, it hasn't just been men who focus on the penis and who continue to make these analogies: in 1671 English midwife Jane Sharpe called the clitoris “the female penis.” Even as recently as 2014 a father-daughter pair of academics published a paper on the existence of the “female penis” in a special edition of the journal Clinical Anatomy. The paper argued that today’s sexologists are using the wrong terminology; the paper suggested, instead, new terminology that re-centered the terms of the discussion around existing male nomenclature. The researchers argue that most of the female sexual arousal area, instead of being referred to as the internal or external clitoris and attendant glands, should be called the female penis because the clitoris and the penis develop from the same undifferentiated cells in a blastocyst. Similarly, a female doctor on Twitter once corrected Earp that the 'ambiguous' genitalia of some persons with intersex variations was not actually rightly called a cliteropenis; rather, the correct medically terminology to use is 'phallus', she said.

In conclusion to this section, just because some structures are homologues does not mean that they are indistinguishable or that we should call them the same thing. The bones of humans, bats and birds in these species forearms and wings are also homologous because they share a common ancestry. But we recognise all sorts of differences and we don't say that wings are 'really arms' or that bats have 'wing-arms'. We also recognise that the bones of humans and birds, although homologues, are very different materially in all sorts of ways, e.g. that birds have less dense bones which aids flying. So too with the penis and clitoris, the most obvious being that the urethra does not run through the clitoris, and so it has not role in urination or the through-pass of gametes.

We need to de-penis-ize our language. Doing so will be better for female persons, as well as intersex and trans persons.


A big clitoris is not a 'less female' clitoris

Another unintended consequence of Earp's proposal to measure the size of our sex organs and then to plot this measurement on a scale that would then be used to position people in multidimensional gendered-space, is that the prospect that the size of our genitals vis-a-vis others' genitals should have anything to do with our 'sex' or our 'genders' should make us all pretty uncomfortable.

Say we take the following measurements of the external parts of people's sex organs: 1/ Marsha: 0.5cm 2/ Jan: 1.5cm 3/ Bobby: 8cm 4/ Greg: 12cm

This implies that (for this feature): 1. Marsha's is the most female. 2. Marsha's is more 'female' and 'feminine' than Jan's. 3. Jan's is also more 'masculine' than Marsha's. 4. Greg's is the most male. 5. His is more 'male' and more 'masculine' than Bobby's. 6. Bobby's is more 'feminine' than Greg's.

But if two people are in fact female, it's problematic and pernicious to say that one is more female than the other female person, ceteris parabis, because her genitals are smaller.

For similar reasons, it's problematic to even say that Marsha's genitals are more 'feminine' than Jan's. Labiaplasty, which aims to reduce the size of the labia minora (the 'inner lips' of the vulva), is the fastest growing cosmetic surgery in the world. Women are often motivated to go under the knife by their anxieties that their vulvas are 'too big'. Earp's proposal seems to play into that for both women (and for men – that their penises are too small).

Conceiving of genitals as being more or less male or female, and/or masculine or feminine, and the idea that this variable can and should be placed on a sex and/or gender spectrum, likely affects trans, non-binary and intersex persons too. Say a trans woman finds herself in a place in Earp's multi-dimensional gendered space that is still socially perceived as too masculine for her liking: her voice is deep, she likes to still shop in the men's department for clothes, she detests make up, and likes her hair short. Earp's account suggests that she could become more 'female' and/or 'feminine' in gendered space if she reduces the length of her genitals...and severely reduced their length at that.

These implications, I hope you agree, are undesirable. And I can't see any way for Earp to escape these consequences. It seems to me that the size of genitals (at the very least), if not genitals altogether, need to be given up as contributing to his multi-dimensional 'gendered space'.

Conclusion

When Virgina Woolf wrote “What’s more fitting than to destroy an old word, a vicious and corrupt word that has done much harm in its day and is now obsolete? The word ‘feminist’ is the word indicated”, she was writing in the context of a letter sent to an imaginary male recipient. Her comments were intended as an ironic quip on patriarchy's simplification of the term. She concludes with a faux naif suggestion that destroying the words 'tyrant' and 'dictator' would be a good idea too.

The suggestion that we can and we should make progress in this debate by simplifying, conflating and replacing words that have been important to the liberation of a social group, and that continue to be important to that group's liberation, is a naive and dangerous one. What we should do instead is learn from the history of the clitoris, and ensure we don't merely visit the same injustice upon persons with genitals that are neither penises or clitorises.

Endnotes:

[1] The existence of Brian's defence of a position that many same-sex attracted persons find unacceptable, but the absence (to my knowledge) of any bad blood between Brian and same-sex attracted persons, is itself interesting to think about.

Tags: #clitoris #genitals #penis #cliteropenis #gender #sex #intersex #transgender #history #genderwars #philosophygenderwars #feminism

Thoughts on #istandwithmaya

I'm a philosopher who believes that biological sex is mutable and that there are more than two sexes.

But I think that the way that some people (including many of my colleagues in academic philosophy) have treated those they label 'T*RFs' has, for the most part, been misguided, unjust and dangerous. Below I'll explain some of the reasons why, but others will be topics of future posts.

I'll also suggest in the last part of this post that trans activists should be just as worried about the Judge's opinion in the Forstater case as gender critical feminists, because the Judge's arguments can be applied in the other direction too: to some of the speech acts of trans activists.


To begin, it's worth clarifying a few things.

Firstly, while I accept that there are more than two sexes, I don't accept that male persons can literally become female persons. I think male persons can, with certain types of material interventions, move out of the male sex class and into another. But I don't think that they can move into the female sex class. When male and female persons uses exogenous interventions on their material bodies, I think they create new categories of (biological) sex by doing so. This is why I think some of Maya's assertions—and the philosophical scholarship and writings they're based on by Alex Byrne, Kathleen Stock, and others—are much too strong: I think it's highly unlikely that all trans-women are still in fact 'males'. Though some (like Alex Drummond) almost certainly are, of course, since the category 'trans-woman' is such a broad umbrella these days, encompassing everyone from the person who was observed male at birth but who has been on HRT for decades and who has undergone sex reassignment surgery, to male persons who have never suffered from 'gender dysphoria' nor materially intervened on their bodies in any way.

Whilst I have not seen evidence and arguments yet that would convince me that trans-women, or even some subset of trans-women, are in fact female, I remain open to being presented with such evidence and arguments. However, I'm not confident that such evidence and arguments will be forthcoming, or compelling if they are. I also think that the belief that male persons can literally become female persons is uncomfortably close that false belief that some parts of the left held in the early-mid-20th century and which only lead to mass devastation: that wheat could literally become rye, and vice-versa.

I've found it deeply disturbing that many philosophers of science who are very familiar with the horrors of Lysenkoism are now supporting the assertion that 'transwomen are female'. Similarly, some of those I have learnt much about the value of pluralism and dissent in science from were, I noticed, surprisingly quick to propagate the claim that there is a 'scientific consensus' that 'biological sex' is a 'spectrum'. As far as I am aware, there is no such consensus, and the only articles defending the notion of sex specifically as a spectrum (e.g. the article in Nature, and one in Scientific American that links back to the Nature article) are not peer reviewed journal articles – they are pieces of science journalism expressing a view/opinion/idea, not discussing an established scientific fact.

I don't think that a necessary condition for granting respect for trans-women's rights, their dignity, etc. is that they are female (and that trans-men are male), and there being no significant differences between trans-women and say Kathleen Stock or Holly Lawford-Smith. I think there are many practically and politically important differences. In fact, I actually think it's much more trans-positive to 'see', acknowledge and appreciate the beauty in such differences, as well as how not acknowledging such differences could one day lead to a book needing to be written called “Invisible Trans-women”. I've often wondered how much the drive for people to accept TW = F actually stems from transphobia itself (amongst both trans persons and their supporters who want to be good people, but who are struggling on some level to be properly accepting/embracing of trans people), rather than it coming from a genuinely trans positive place.

At the same time, I also believe that there is a sense in which the phrase 'trans women are women' is coherent. Though I do think that many theories that defend the position TW=W have the upshot of excluding some female persons from being W, such as some butch lesbians, female persons who do not have a gender identity, or those whose gender identity is not 'woman'. For instance, whilst Sally Haslanger's 2012 ameliorative account was engineered to ensure that those trans-women who 'pass' as female persons were counted as women, those stone butch lesbians who are frequently mistaken as being male persons seem to be excluded from such an account. Similarly, the upshot of Katherine Jenkins' 2016 modification of Haslanger's account to include non-passing trans-women as women by focusing on a person's 'gender identity' is that those who do not have the gender identity 'woman' will be excluded from the social category 'woman', even if they are exclusively read as women because they are female. Many female persons do not have the gender identity 'woman', including some butch lesbians, androgynous female persons, female persons with a history of gender dysphoria, some second wave feminists, agender female persons etc. This is a bullet those scholars are going to have to bite if they want to hold onto a theory of what a woman is that is inclusive of all persons who self-identify as TW. In other words, i think certain types of trans inclusion in this debate come at the cost of the exclusion of certain female persons. I think biting this bullet could be problematic...though it might not be. It depends on how the conclusion that some F persons are not W is understood by the author/s and readers of that theory, and its practical consequences, i.e. what it's used to do in law, policy, and other social practices (which we should remember could be out of the control of the original author). But in my opinion, most of the more recent 'ameliorative' or 'conceptual engineering' projects that try to make it true that e.g. Alex Drummond is a woman, are deeply problematic and it's hard to see how they are progressive and how they actually enhance, rather than erode, social justice.

I also think that there are many practical contexts in which TW and female persons should share spaces and solidarity, and many contexts in which female persons, TW and other trans, gender diverse and LGBTIQ persons (e.g. gay men) should all join together to fight against a regressive system of gender that holds us all back, as Robin Dembroff has argued. Though, that some people will want to centre different demographics in that fight is reasonable and healthy – those labelled 'T*RFs' are often best understood as female-centering feminists, and the segment of trans activists who take issue with these female-centering feminists' positions are often best understood as 'trans-centering feminists'**. I also think there are other practical contexts in which TW and female persons should have different spaces/be treated differently, as gender critical feminists have argued; I am particularly convinced by spaces like prisons, domestic violence and rape crisis shelters, and certain sports, though I think it's possible that, in some contexts, some TW may qualify for these spaces too. I also think gender critical feminists' arguments on statistics and political and other shortlists are similarly convincing, because in these situations we can often make a new type of shortlist for trans and gender diverse persons, with the result that even more spots/opportunities are taken away from the demographic found at the top of the hierarchy (i.e. gender conforming male persons...though it's important to note other intersecting axes of oppression here, like race, class and sexuality).

I think to solve practical moral and political dilemmas—and I think that some of the interests- and rights-clashes are best thought of as tragedies, where either way a decision will have undesirable consequences—we need theoretical work that is much more nuanced and context-dependent than the overly-simplistic and over-extrapolated theories scholars on 'both sides' have given us to date. When it comes to biological sex, neither a theory of self-identification (i.e. I am what I say I am, and I have a legal right to have that assertion recognised and respected in all contexts...there are no spaces or entitlements for 'Fs' that I am not permitted in or to have), nor one that is the other extreme (people are immutably the sex they were observed at birth, and should always/everywhere/in all contexts be treated as that sex) is, in my opinion, correct, or even pragmatically appealing for the purposes of law and public policy.


With these clarifications in place, I shall now describe and discuss my thoughts on the Maya Forstater case. The Judgement can be found here.

I find it strange that the trial focused on Forstater's beliefs, but I guess this is what her legal team thought was the best tactic to take. It seems to me that what is really at issue, however, is not Forstater's beliefs, but rather whether Forstater's speech acts in the context they were made in were reasonable, and relatedly, whether an employer has the right to end* an employment agreement with someone for the speech acts they make on social media as a citizen. This can be complicated by the fact that many people include their employer's details on their Twitter account, often to bolster their credibility, and/or many people can be quite easily be traced back to their place of employment with a basic google search. I do think organisations have some good reasons to not want their employees to say certain things online, given the impacts this can have on their organisation's perceived reputation, as well as how such speech might affect other employees' wellbeing in the workplace, or that of their clients, supporters, etc. But this is of course dangerous territory, since the freedom to express reasonable views within public debate is fundamental to living in a democratic society (and some scholars, like Jewish gay philosopher Eric Heize, think that even the freedom to express unreasonable views is fundamental to a democracy properly counting as a democracy). It's quite easy to imagine—especially after the Judge's conclusion in this case—a situation in which democratic discussion suffers from widespread stifling because many have developed reasonable fears of losing their livelihoods and self-silencing. I think this is already happening on a worrying scale in the philosophy community, and that this is an issue that needs more attention.

The better question then, is whether Forstater's speech acts were reasonable ones to make in the context she made them in, or whether they instead constituted a type of speech act that can be reasonably perceived as harassment/bullying and/or bringing her employer into disrepute. If her speech acts, in their context, were reasonable, then Forstater's claim to having been discriminated against on the basis of her sex might also hold given the motivation and content of her speech acts (i.e. defending the rights of female persons, a socially disadvantaged group and one to which Forstater belongs to), since it's possible that making a poor judgment about whether or not her speech acts were reasonable could be, in a large part, down to sexism and misogyny (i.e. being treated unfavourably on the basis of her sex). That the Judge in this case was a male person is worrying, since he, like Forstater's employer, could be enacting sexism and misogyny against Forstater.

Forstater's beliefs, expressions and concerns are at least intelligible. As the Judge even noted, they are also largely consistent with current British and EU laws. These laws generally lack clear guidance as to how 'sex' and 'gender' and 'transgender' are to be interpreted for the purpose of applying these laws, because the law frequently lacks definitions of such terms. Additionally, given the relative newness of many of these terms (e.g. 'non-binary'), as well as their ambiguity and contested nature, and the ongoing evolution of self-understandings of various trans phenomena, I think we need to be patient with ordinary citizens' use of language, and their potential misunderstanding that they are in the 'right' and the other person in the 'wrong'. But it may also be the case that they are not in the wrong, and our own perception that they're being immoral, is incorrect.

Even in his judgment, the Judge's own comments with respect to the U.K's Gender Recognition Act and the Equality Act (and the laws themselves) are contradictory, as gender critical feminists have pointed out. Here's what the Judge says (comments in brackets are mine).

At #79: “Many of concerns that the Claimant has, such as ensuring protection of vulnerable women, do not, in fact, rest on holding a belief that biological sex is immutable (I agree, see my reasons above). It is quite possible to accept that trans-women are women (it's unclear what 'women' refers to here – no definition is provided and this ambiguity is traded on) but still argue that there are certain circumstances in which it would be justified to exclude certain trans women from spaces that are generally only open to women assigned female at birth because of trauma suffered by users of the space who have been subject to sexual assault. This may be lawful under EqA where it is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.”

But at #70 the Judge provides the wording from Section 9 Gender Recognition Act which reads: “(1) Where a full gender recognition certificate is issued to a person, the person’s gender becomes for all purposes the acquired gender (so that, if the acquired gender is the male gender, the person’s sex becomes that of a man and, if it is the female gender, the person’s sex becomes that of a woman)” (emphasis added).

Note that the Act makes sex and gender inseparable and effectively identical in meaning, since if a person has a 'gender recognition certificate' they are “for all purposes” to be understood as their acquired gender. So it's been very unclear whether or not one can legally exclude a person whose documents say 'F' from e.g. a rape crisis shelter for female people because the Gender Recognition Act says one thing, and the Equality Act says another, and it's not clear how these two pieces of legislation interact. This is unacceptable, and in practice many organisations have just decided not to try to exclude even when they deem it would be proportionate, because the law is so unclear, and erring the other way presents the greater risk (e.g. given what has happened to the Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter for one). At points #83 and #84 the Judge faults Forstater for “refusing to accept that a Gender Recognition Certificate changes a person’s sex for all purposes.” But how could one not refuse to accept that when another piece of legislation says something else?

It's deeply unfair to make a British citizen trying to point out such a flaw to be held responsible for the flaw; that flaw is the responsibility of the British state, and it would do well to listen to the women who have been trying to raise this issue—which could have, and has had, grave practical consequences—with the powers that be in the British government, only to have been harassed themselves for doing so.


But the following is, perhaps, the most important thing about this case – there are various things the Judge concludes that should make trans persons and their allies concerned for their own beliefs and speech acts too.

For example, at point #84, that Forstater's view about biological sex is “absolutist” in nature is, the Judge finds, “incompatible with human dignity and fundamental rights of others”. But aren't those whose views are that “transwomen are female”, or that “if a transwoman with a penis asserts she's a lesbian, then she's a lesbian”, also equally 'absolutist' beliefs? And aren't those beliefs the kind of beliefs that are arguably also “incompatible with the human dignity and fundamental rights of others”, namely, female persons and lesbians?

The Judge also concludes (#85) that (my comments in brackets): “The Claimant's position is that even if a trans woman has a Gender Recognition Certificate, she cannot honestly describe herself as a woman (read 'female' here). That belief is not worthy of respect in a democratic society. It is incompatible with the human rights of others that have been identified and defined by the ECHR and put into effect through the Gender Recognition Act.”

Here, again, there could be similar reasoning. You could imagine a Judge concluding the following, with respect to a trans-woman with a penis who continually asserts in her workplace that she's in a lesbian relationship, and does so especially when two female employees who are in a relationship together are within earshot. This trans-woman says things like the following: – “lesbians who won't consider dating me are transphobes!” – “same-sex attraction is transphobic!” – “the only morally defensible sexuality is pansexuality” – “when I married my female partner in Britain in the year 2000 (i.e. before same-sex marriages were permitted in the UK), we were really marrying as a lesbian couple...we've always been a lesbian couple” – “I have a penis and I am a lesbian...and I think Leo on the original L-Word was too”. – “You must believe that lesbians can have penises, otherwise you're a transphobic cis-c*nt who should die in a greasefire” – “most lesbians I know are T%RFs”

The Judge says that “Calling a trans woman a man is likely to be profoundly distressing. It may be unlawful harassment.” I think that this could be harassment in certain situations, yes. But given that people with penises claiming they are literally female persons has profoundly distressed many female persons, I think that one could make a strong argument that trans activists continually asserting that trans-women are literally female, and that trans-women who have penises can be lesbians, also constituents harassment of these minority groups, and deprives them of certain types of dignity. Whose distress is more warranted? Whose distress matters more?

These actors in philosophy—who I note have mostly been male persons, trans-women or others observed male at birth—have created an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating and offensive environment for female philosophers and students, and especially female philosophers and students who are same-sex attracted. Whether or not this is 'worthy of respect in a democratic society' it's certainly not worthy of respect within the philosophy community.

End notes:

*Those who point out “they didn't terminate her contract, they just decided not to renew it” are avoiding dealing with the issue, and also implicitly supporting the gig-economy and powerful employers' abilities to wave insecure work contracts around as threats in an attempt to get their employees to submit.

**The use of the word 'T%RF' by trans activists has frequently been associated with threats of violence and even death against female persons. I find it doubtful that such persons are truly feminists. Of course, this applies in the other direction too, to those who threaten similar acts against trans persons. From my observations, however, threats of physical violence and death from trans activists towards gender critical feminists dwarf those I've seen in the other direction. The persons who threaten and enact physical violence against trans and gender non-conforming persons in our society are generally men.

Tags: #genderwars #philosophygenderwars #biologicalsex #gender #mayaforstater #jkrowling #feminism #transgender #transwomen