The big idea: If gender is largely built, then two big pictures get built with it: what counts as feminine and what counts as masculine. These aren't just descriptions — they're jobs handed out.
List the usual traits: femininity is cast as gentle, caring, patient; masculinity as bold, strong, in charge. Then notice who gets steered toward which, and which roles each set of traits is used to justify.
So a gender construct does two things at once: it describes a supposed nature and it distributes roles — who leads, who cares, who's paid, who serves. This section asks how those constructs are made and shared out; the rest asks whether that distribution is fair.
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Not every tradition frames the two as a ranking; some frame them as a balance.
Yin and yang: female and male as complements: In classical Chinese thought, yin and yang are complementary forces, and yin has often been linked to the female, yang to the male. The picture is one of balance: neither is 'better', and each needs the other to make a whole. That's a genuinely different frame from a simple hierarchy — it treats masculine and feminine as a pair that completes, not a ladder.
But philosophers ask a careful question of it: does casting women as the receptive 'yin' still, in practice, assign them the quieter, subordinate roles? A frame can sound equal and still distribute unequally — so 'complementary' has to be tested against how the roles actually fall out.
Checkpoint — the two framings: In one line: constructs can be framed as a hierarchy (one above the other) OR as complementary pairs (yin/yang) — but either way you must check how the roles and power actually get shared out.
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When a role-distribution systematically disadvantages one gender, philosophers call it by name.
Sexism — and it never travels alone: Sexism is unfair treatment on the basis of sex or gender — from open barriers to the quiet steering of who gets which chances. A key modern insight is that it rarely acts by itself. Intersectionality points out that sexism overlaps with other kinds of disadvantage — race, class, disability, and more — so that, for example, a poor woman and a wealthy woman meet sexism in very different ways. The oppressions don't just add up; they combine into a distinct experience you'd miss if you looked at gender alone.
Go further — higher-level insight: The deepest point connects back to construction. If gender roles were fixed by nature, calling their distribution 'unjust' would be like calling gravity unjust — pointless. It's precisely because the roles are largely made that they can be judged, defended or changed. Constructionism is what turns gender from a fact to be accepted into a practice that can be held to account. And an even-handed answer still weighs the reply that some difference may be real — the argument is about the fairness of the distribution, not a denial that men and women differ at all.
Checkpoint — the case for change: In one line: because gender roles are largely built, we can ask whether they're built fairly — and intersectionality reminds us sexism combines with other disadvantages rather than acting alone.
How Section B works: Section B is the OPTIONAL-theme essay [25]: you pick one question from your theme (here, Social philosophy) and write a full argued response — no stimulus. The command is usually 'Evaluate' or 'Discuss': present a claim, argue for and against it, and reach a reasoned conclusion. Gender is rich ground because the sex/gender and construction debates give you real tension to work with.
Evaluate the claim that gender is a social construct rather than a fact of biology.
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See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Common mistakes: 1. Describing the views instead of arguing the claim. 2. Only one side — 'Evaluate' needs for AND against. 3. No conclusion — decide, with a reason. 4. Reducing it to biology OR waving biology away — the honest answer argues a degree. 5. Name-dropping — a name earns nothing without its argument.