Another alternative to it being a disorder is that we forget our stupid ideas about gender and sex being fundamentally intertwined, and reject the hypothesis that there is nothing but two genders at all.
While I agree that would help with many things, how on Earth does this solve the problem of a person being born whose physical sex characteristics do not match up with what the brain expects them to be? This has
absolutely nothing to do with gender at all, it has to do with a mismatch between a person's neural body-mapping and their physical anatomy.
Does it have to be an illness? Is the "sickness" in the individual, or in the society? Where are we to aim our pejoratives and ire?
Here's the problem: You somehow think that calling something a "disorder" means you're placing blame, ire, or pejoratives upon the person. Or at least that's what your statement comes off as. Obviously, this is not true., and it doesn't.
If someone runs up to me with a baseball bat and breaks my leg, then yes, that person deserves the ire, but I've
still got a broken leg and that's still a legitimate medical problem. Similarly, if problematic elements within society get to someone in such a manner that he develops a psychiatric problem because of it,
it's still a problem even though he isn't to blame.
Real life, less-controversial example: My girlfriend's parents take care of foster kids, and have adopted some kids as well. Many of these kids were abused or neglected when very young, and as a result, they have significant psychiatric problems and disorders. Saying "let's not call them disorders because the problem was with their environment"
does not help. Even though their disorders are the result of upbringing, abuse, neglect, or other social/environmental factors,
they are still disorders. Similarly, even if someone with a gender-related psychiatric disorder only has that disorder due to either the arbitrary indoctrination imposed upon him by society, or society's abuse levied upon him, his disorder
should still be taken seriously. Just because a psychiatric problem isn't the person's own fault does not mean it isn't a psychiatric problem, and saying otherwise belittles their problem to the point where you're acting as if it doesn't deserve real treatment.
Right. I would at least partially agree to that, though I believe there could be a "cut" in the definition to limit it more heavily to those situations. I'm not exactly an expert on this, though. I'd still agree with the folks that are terming it a physical problem, rather than a mental problem. The question is one of emphasis--i.e. whether the body is to be changed, or the mind.
Again, whether you consider it a mental or physical problem is arbitrary; neither is "right" or "wrong", as the entire problem is that some fundamental neurology deviated in development from some fundamental anatomy. What matters is which approach works better or is more useful with current methods and technology. Right now, those methods are pretty sorely limited, as we've gone through earlier in the thread, but obviously, the anatomical method is the only choice we have at the moment. So to say that it's either a "mental" or "physical" problem is, honestly, not even a valid question. If a square peg doesn't fit into a round hole, is the hole problematic or the circle? It's a problem of incompatibility, not a problem inherent to either one. Now, further research could possibly change this conclusion depending on what we learn about the etiology of the condition (i.e. what actually causes it).
Right, but wouldn't that just be a homosexual status with cognitive dissonance, etc. on the side? The homosexuality, in and of itself, is doing nothing. It is the reactions of society to a nominally harmless behavior.
Well, it would be distinct from general "cognitive dissonance" in that it has to do with a very specific part of the psyche, in this case sexuality. Being such a specific yet nuanced phenomenon gives it reason for special consideration, especially if it's common. This is commonly done in psychiatry, as it's just a matter of classification. It's not "a homosexual person who happens to have cognitive dissonance", it's "a homosexual person with cognitive dissonance regarding their homosexuality, spurned on by destructive social attitudes and indoctrination". The dissonance has to do with a particular and very complex aspect of the self which has its own unique pitfalls and considerations, as I said.
...
So, how do you suggest dealing with this individual? Are we to say that all transgendered people are schizophrenics, now, as we likely would for the other?
(Hint: I don't think so.)
I wasn't making a statement about transsexuals here (this does not mean the same thing as "transgendered", and I'm not sure why you seem to use the terms interchangeably when it's hopefully clear which one I'm talking about and when). It was just an argument against the particular logic he was using (that if the mind expects one thing and the body is another thing, the problem cannot be deemed psychiatric). I was demonstrating a case that is distinct from being transsexual but which nonetheless exposes the flawed nature of the logic used.
Obviously the situation is different in the case of the transsexual, as it has to do with normal development of sex characteristics, and the brain and body just happened to deviate along those lines for one unfortunate reason or another; it's not a matter of delusion or psychosis or schizoid thought, or anything like that, just a matter of the brain mapping itself to the wrong parts in development (or, conversely, the parts themselves developing into the wrong ones; again, it's arbitrary).