people are saying that "at conception" means we're all female now, since fetuses differentiate weeks later
but let's look at the other parts of the definitions they laid out...
in (a), sex is defined as a classification between "male" and "female"
then, in (d) and (e), "male" and "female" are each defined as "a person belonging, at conception, to the sex that produces the [large|small] reproductive cell"
tautological definitions aside, this effectively means that sex is defined as a classification based on the production of different-sized gametes.
however, that "at conception" adds an impossible constraint. nobody produces gametes as a fetus - gamete production starts during puberty. the definitions don't allow us to consider gamete production at a later stage of development... sex is a classification based on gamete production, and classification occurs at conception.
so it seems to me that, rather than everyone being female, nobody has a sex. "male" and "female" are unattainable for humans, so we're all agender/nonbinary/etc.
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from lina@neuromatch.social
@lina That would explain a great deal at once.
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from Gustodon@mas.to
text/gemini
This content has been proxied by September (3851b).