Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex

Biological sex is commonly understood and accepted as a strict dichotomy with clear categorical boundaries. However, the nature of biological sex is far more complicated than what culture has presented it to be. In this paper I seek to understand the social construction of biological sex under a dom...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tan, Penny Pin
Other Authors: Andres Carlos Luco
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137576
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author Tan, Penny Pin
author2 Andres Carlos Luco
author_facet Andres Carlos Luco
Tan, Penny Pin
author_sort Tan, Penny Pin
collection NTU
description Biological sex is commonly understood and accepted as a strict dichotomy with clear categorical boundaries. However, the nature of biological sex is far more complicated than what culture has presented it to be. In this paper I seek to understand the social construction of biological sex under a dominant gender dimorphic framework through exploring the gap between science and ideology. I refer to Judith Butler’s notion of sex as gendered to navigate through the various ways in which society has attempted to fix inconsistencies with the binary view of sex, which has both theoretical and practical implications pointing towards the incompleteness of the current definition. I argue that the traditional notion of biological sex should be redefined in light of sex variations that render the commonsense view theoretically flawed, which has further led to a series of unethical social consequences bearing on those who possess such anatomical differences.
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spelling ntu-10356/1375762020-04-03T02:10:05Z Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex Tan, Penny Pin Andres Carlos Luco School of Humanities ACLuco@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Philosophy Biological sex is commonly understood and accepted as a strict dichotomy with clear categorical boundaries. However, the nature of biological sex is far more complicated than what culture has presented it to be. In this paper I seek to understand the social construction of biological sex under a dominant gender dimorphic framework through exploring the gap between science and ideology. I refer to Judith Butler’s notion of sex as gendered to navigate through the various ways in which society has attempted to fix inconsistencies with the binary view of sex, which has both theoretical and practical implications pointing towards the incompleteness of the current definition. I argue that the traditional notion of biological sex should be redefined in light of sex variations that render the commonsense view theoretically flawed, which has further led to a series of unethical social consequences bearing on those who possess such anatomical differences. Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy 2020-04-03T02:10:05Z 2020-04-03T02:10:05Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137576 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Humanities::Philosophy
Tan, Penny Pin
Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex
title Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex
title_full Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex
title_fullStr Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex
title_full_unstemmed Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex
title_short Redefining biological sex : a place for the intersex
title_sort redefining biological sex a place for the intersex
topic Humanities::Philosophy
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137576
work_keys_str_mv AT tanpennypin redefiningbiologicalsexaplacefortheintersex