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Topic 8.3Philosophy HL24 flashcards

Gender

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Card 1 of 248.3.1
8.3.1
Question

Sex vs gender?

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All Flashcards in Topic 8.3

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8.3.18 cards

Card 1comparison
Question

Sex vs gender?

Answer

Sex = the biological classing of the body (chromosomes, anatomy); gender = the social roles, expectations and identity attached to it.

Card 2definition
Question

Sex?

Answer

The biological features a body is classed by — chromosomes, anatomy, hormones.

Card 3definition
Question

Gender?

Answer

The social meanings, roles and identity attached to being a man, woman or neither.

Card 4concept
Question

Gender essentialism?

Answer

The view that men and women each share a fixed inner nature (an 'essence') set by biology, so gender follows sex.

Card 5concept
Question

Objection 1 to essentialism?

Answer

The categories are messier than two clean boxes — intersex traits, and people whose gender doesn't match their assigned sex.

Card 6concept
Question

Objection 2 to essentialism?

Answer

The traits pinned to each gender keep changing across time and place — a fixed essence shouldn't wander like that.

Card 7concept
Question

Why does the sex/gender split matter?

Answer

Once sex and gender are apart, 'gender simply follows biology' stops being obvious — opening the constructionist debate.

Card 8concept
Question

The key question of the topic?

Answer

How much of 'being a man' or 'being a woman' is the body (sex), and how much is what society and the self make of it (gender)?

8.3.28 cards

Card 9concept
Question

Gender is 'socially constructed'?

Answer

The gender role is built by a society's practices and expectations, not simply given by nature (constructed does NOT mean unreal).

Card 10concept
Question

De Beauvoir: 'one is not born but becomes a woman'?

Answer

Being a woman is a role you're shaped into over time by society, not a fact simply handed to you at birth.

Card 11concept
Question

Where does de Beauvoir make this claim?

Answer

In her book *The Second Sex* — the pivot of the modern sex/gender debate.

Card 12definition
Question

Social conditioning?

Answer

The way repeated rewards, corrections and examples train us into a role until it feels natural.

Card 13concept
Question

Why is conditioning 'invisible'?

Answer

Repeated from birth, the role sinks below notice and feels like it was simply you all along — which is why essentialism seems obvious.

Card 14concept
Question

The 'it feels natural' reply, answered?

Answer

Feeling natural is exactly what successful conditioning produces, so the feeling can't settle whether gender is born or made.

Card 15concept
Question

The even-handed conclusion on gender?

Answer

Argue a DEGREE: a real bodily base, heavily overwritten by social shaping — mostly, not purely, constructed.

Card 16comparison
Question

Essence vs construction in one line?

Answer

Essentialism: gender is born. De Beauvoir: gender is built — and built to feel born.

8.3.38 cards

Card 17definition
Question

Gender construct?

Answer

A society's picture of what a man or a woman should be like — it both describes a supposed nature and distributes roles.

Card 18concept
Question

Femininity and masculinity as constructs?

Answer

Built pictures (caring vs bold, and so on) used to sort people into roles — who leads, cares, is paid, serves.

Card 19concept
Question

Why link yin and yang to female/male?

Answer

They're framed as complementary opposites that balance to make a whole — a pair that completes, not a ranking.

Card 20concept
Question

The careful question about 'complementary' framings?

Answer

A frame can sound equal yet still distribute unequally — so test how the roles actually fall out.

Card 21definition
Question

Sexism?

Answer

Treating people unfairly on the basis of their sex or gender — from open barriers to the quiet steering of chances.

Card 22concept
Question

Intersectionality?

Answer

Forms of oppression (sexism, racism, class) overlap and combine into a distinct experience you'd miss looking at gender alone.

Card 23concept
Question

Why does construction matter for justice?

Answer

Roles that are made — not fixed by nature — can be judged, defended and changed; that's what lets us ask if they're fair.

Card 24process
Question

What does Section B (Evaluate) reward?

Answer

Arguing the claim both ways with more than one view and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing.

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