• Glenn Wilson on the Sex Identity of Hermaphrodites

    From NefeshBarYochai@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 30 23:41:08 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.bible.prophecy, alt.politics.homosexuality

    Research by John Money and others over the past few decades has shown
    that when a child is born hermaphroditic (of indeterminate sex) but is decisively identified as one sex or the other by doctors and parents
    from a very early age, that child will usually be fairly accepting of
    the assigned gender and the social role that accompanies it (Money and Ehrhardt, 1972). This fact has been quoted by many social learning
    theorists as support for their position that sex roles are acquired
    rather than inborn. If a child is genetically one sex but can
    successfully be reared as a number of the other, they say, this must
    indicate the overwhelming power of social learning experiences. It is important, however, to recall in this connection that the biological
    factor determining gender is not the chromosome pattern but the
    balance of hormones to which the body and brain is exposed from
    conception onwards. An infant whose external genitalia are ambiguous
    is clearly only part masculinized and therefore genuinely intermediate
    in terms of gender, regardless of chromosome pattern. It is
    understandable that in cases like these it is possible to push the
    individual’s identification towards one gender or the other with a
    combination of surgical and hormonal treatment and social persuasion,
    so that they are unlikely to dispute their assigned gender. This tells
    us nothing about the difficulties that would be encountered in trying
    to cross-socialize an individual of unambiguous sex without the aid of
    surgery or hormones. Money and his colleagues now recognize this
    distinction and no longer maintain the radical environmentalist
    viewpoint that is often quoted from their earlier papers.

    In any case Money’s early conclusions related specifically to gender
    identity, not the broader aspects of masculinity and femininity which
    are under partly separate brain control, being laid down in different
    area of the brain and at different phases of pre-natal development
    (Ellis and Ames, 1987). Many of the androgenital cases, for example,
    identified themselves as women happily enough but showed distinct
    ‘tomboyism’ in their pattern of interests. They enjoyed
    ‘rough-and-tumble’ activities, preferred wearing trousers to dresses
    and were uninterested in marriage and motherhood.

    Since Money’s early work on hermaphroditism in humans, a fascinating
    new condition has come to light as a result of its prevalence within a particular mountain district of the Dominican Republic. Male pseudo-hermaphroditism (Imperato-McGinley et al., 1974) or machihembra (‘man-woman’ as the locals call it) is an inherited enzyme deficiency
    which causes genetic males to develop as females until puberty, at
    which time androgen production is suddenly increased and the
    individual turns into a male (complete with penis, descended
    testicles, deep voice, facial and body hair and well-developed
    muscles). The interesting thing about these individuals is that,
    although raised as girls, they have little difficulty in adjusting to
    a male identity after their bodily conversion at puberty. They develop
    male mannerisms and attitudes and are sexually attracted to females
    just like normal men. Perhaps most interesting of all is the discovery
    that they often begin to think of themselves as boys at the age of
    five or six, well before any physical changes have begun to take
    place.

    This may be regarded as one of the most direct tests of the relative
    power of society and hormones in determining gender identity and
    sex-role characteristics, and the hormones appear victorious.

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