Thank you. I look forward to seeing it. As a born and trained scientist, there aren't many things that the scientific community agrees is pseudoscience that I wind up finding very credible. It usually involves sloppy assumptions and methodology, and the scientific method (usually) works pretty well. But I'm always interested in being surprised.
Meanwhile, there's *tons* of stuff out there about the lack of correlation of genetics with what we call "race" - and even how to define what "race" is.
On the gender side, I'm not sure how we reconcile a biological origin with the cultural variations of gender expression, just one example being the Bugis people of Indonesia who have 5 genders. As
@Asche has so eloquently said:
Quote from: Asche on May 22, 2025, 01:21:55 PMI think just about everything said about gender, and even most of the research, is pure BS, but it's part of the world I have to live in, sort of like the current US administration, so I can't just ignore it.
I don't feel any differently, really, and I'm *very* interested in research that clarifies it. I just have yet to see any.
We are not born biologically into membership in any religion or political party or sports fandom. By whatever mechanism, whether innate or acquired, we all discover within ourselves deep, strongly held values that (I hope) inform and guide how we live our lives. We find people who share those values and associate and identify with them to the point where we adopt the label of the group. We can experience that profound sense of identity without it having a genetic basis and it can still be as valid as any other aspect of our identity. To require that it be attached to any physical attribute makes as much sense as believing that you have to have red hair to love classical music.
Nobody has to play along with "prove to me that your experience is valid in a game where I get to make the rules." We're more complex and more interesting than that, and I think that's a good thing.