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Yes, of course it should be. But only if the goal is to discuss the culture war, rather than to engage in it. Most people who post here appear to be more interested in the latter. Which is why they also tend to conflate descriptive claims, such as the one you make here, with normative claims.
People are attuned to the argument tactic of controlling the definition to win the argument. Funny enough, the responses have been “argument by definition is not good” which isn’t waging the culture war.
I would say that when one side says, "this is what we mean by 'gender'", the refusal of someone on the other side to engage with that, and to instead say, "that is not what gender means; you are arguing by definition" is indeed waging the culture war. Arguing about the culture war would involve a discussion of whether the other side's definition is analytically useful.
Mirror universe or something. The OP stated “this is THE definition.” No argument; just this is fact.
It would be reasonable to just respond “argument by definition.” But many posters did not; they went beyond that. They explained definitions are only really beneficial to the extent they describe something real and based on that they think OP’s definition is faulty.
Yet you are literally switching the roles of the poster here to fit your side.
Perhaps I am mistaken, but as I understand OP, they are merely saying that that is the definition used by those on the "other side." And, in fact, it has been the accepted meaning within the scholarly community that deals with this stuff for decades, so when people come 30 years late to the party and say, "you are using that word wrong," it is not unreasonable to respond by pointing out that those people are ignorant of the established meaning.
The idea that a small (and at the time very fringe) group of academics (not sure I’d call it scholarly) gets to define a word because the gen public don’t speak up at the time is bullshit.
Who cares who "gets to define words"? Words have different meanings in different contexts. It isn't about who "gets" to define a word. You know another word that a small group of academics got to define, because the general public didn't speak up at the time? Work. The point is that, just as when physicist use the word "work" they mean something very specific, when anthropologists, etc, use the word "gender" they mean something very specific. So, once again, if one is to discuss the culture war, rather engage in it, one has to acknowledge that that is what those people mean when they use the term, "gender." Were the discussion about gay rights, would you talk about what the word "gay" really means, because I can tell you that some people went on and on about that 40 years ago.
You could have a point if we were discussing gender in a gender studies journal. But the OP didn’t say anything of that sort. Instead, OP stated it is a fact that gender is distinct from sex. This is a general conversation. Whatever anthropologist or gender studies people think about the word gender is irrelevant to this discussion.
When called on it, you then defended OP’s position by saying academics defined it. When pointing out that is also BS you then made an argument “we are only talking about this academically and you are engaging in the culture war.” No I’m calling you on your obvious bad faith engagement.
As I said previously, "Perhaps I am mistaken, but as I understand OP, they are merely saying that that is the definition used by those on the 'other side.'" The "other side" being, of course, people who, among other things, talk about gender in gender studies journals.
Bottom line: You are refusing to engage in their claims, and instead are complaining about how unfair it is that a "group of academics . . . gets to define a word because the gen public don’t speak up at the time[.]" Again, who cares? Would their arguments have more merit had they manufactured a new word for the same concept? Presumably not.
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The 2871 schtick is a fancy way of saying "I'm not taking a side, I'm talking about objective truths that any disinterested party would recognize:.
In other words, no, "one side" does not say that. Or at least that's what he claims.
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