Every word referring to an emotion is a homonym. One meaning when it's referring to a woman's emotion, entirely different meaning when referring to a man's.
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon
Compare: "Every word referring to a bone in the human skeleton is a homonym. One meaning when it's referring to a woman's bone, entirely different meaning when referring to a man's." 1/2
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Replying to @zackmdavis @CovfefeAnon
Intent of analogy: sexual dimorphism exists (not just obvious things like the pelvis, but subtle stuff that machine learning can pick up but human radiologists can't: http://unremediatedgender.space/papers/yune_et_al-beyond_human_perception_sexual_dimorphism_in_hand_and_wrist_radiographs.pdf …), but you're clearly just enjoying blasphemy rather than trying to describe the thing 2/2
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Replying to @zackmdavis
More commonalities in bone use cases than in emotion use cases. Walking, carrying light burdens, etc. - common and routine. Different functional requirements, OTOH -> differences Emotions are closer to a pelvis since they're intimately tied with social roles and reproduction
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Emotions take general reactions and change them to suit circumstances. "Why did you react that way?" "Because I was [angry/sad/confused/etc.]" The change in behavior brought on is going to be different between men and women
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