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Do you believe your gender is determined primarily by what you identify as? || Do you believe your race is determined primarily by what you identify as?
  • Yes | Yes
    8%
  • Yes | No
    19.9%
  • No | Yes
    4.3%
  • No | No
    67.9%
4,349 votesFinal results
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Replying to
Yes/no seems right to me, if you mean something like sincere identification. Gender concepts rely more on internal traits a person can identify in themselves, whereas racial concepts rely more on external facts (e.g. history) that you can lack even with sincere identification.
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The distinction between concepts that rely mostly on internally identifiable features vs. those that don’t? Another example might be the property of having a headache vs. the property of having malaria.
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Replying to and
It could just be a total accident, but I suspect the role race concepts play makes it useful for them to depend slightly more on external traits. I think we want to know if someone has been affected by them or someone in their family being identifiable as a member of the group.
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This is my theory for why trans-gender is more accepted than trans-race stuff; for us culturally, knowing what race you "really are" feels like it tells us more socially important factors for behavior than knowing what gender you "really are".
I mean I think the answer here is that it's extremely important for an organism to *know* which gender it is, but there is -- almost by def -- no importance to *knowing* which subspecies population it comes from. Thus gender has deep psychological correlates absent in race.
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