Articulating Intersex: A Crisis at the Intersection of Scientific Facts and Social Ideals

Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

This book explores the ethical dilemma clinicians may face when disclosing a diagnosis of atypical sex. The moment of disclosure reveals an epistemic incompatibility between scientific fact and social meaning in relation to sex. Attempting to assess the bio-psychosocial implications of this dilemma highlights a complex historic antagonism between fact and meaning making satisfactory resolution of this dilemma difficult. Drawing on David Hume, WVO Quine and Michel Foucault the author presents an integrative model, which views scientific fact and social meaning as codetermining threads in one fabric of knowledge. From this epistemic perspective, the ethical dilemma is understood as a tear in the fabric signifying a rupturing of ontological integrity. To mend this tear and resolve the ethical dilemma three metaphysical perspectives are considered: essentialism, naturalism and emergentism. The book’s unique features include: an exploration of the impact of diagnostic disclosure on people with atypical sex ; a synthesis of the epistemic perspectives of social and natural science facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration; a critical evaluation of three metaphysical perspectives on atypical sex ; the application of Hume’s epistemological and moral distinctions to contemporary biomedicine and bioethics. The book’s target audience includes academics, students and professionals whose work intersects the natural and social sciences, and individuals interested in the metaphysics, epistemology and meta-ethics of sex.

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Chapters

Conclusion

This concluding chapter briefly outlines the aims and objectives of the book. It explains disinterpellation, which emerges when a patient is diagnosed with sex characteristics that contest their gender identity resulting in feelings of subjective incoherence. This incoherence is described as a tear ... see more

Disinterpellation and Emergentism

Disinterpellation emerges at the moment of diagnostic disclosure when a patient’s dualistic understanding of sex is intersected by the scientific fact that sex is variant and this variance is inscribed onto his/her body disturbing the subjective coherence of the patient’s identity. This discordance ... see more

Disinterpellation and Naturalism

Disinterpellation emerges at the moment of diagnostic disclosure when a patient’s dualistic understanding of sex is intersected by the scientific fact that sex is variant and this variance is inscribed onto his/her body disturbing the subjective coherence of the patient’s identity. This discordance ... see more

Disinterpellation and Essential Kinds

Disinterpellation emerges at the moment of diagnostic disclosure when a patient’s dualistic understanding of sex is intersected by scientific fact that sex is variant and this variance is inscribed onto his/her body disturbing the social coherence of the patient’s identity. This discordance is descr... see more

Dynamic Coherentism

The previous chapter introduced two concepts, disinterpellation and mutual mistranslation which emerge at the intersection of two incompatible interpretations of reality: social and natural science. The former refers to the subjective incoherence that can emerge when diagnostic information contests ... see more

Contested Realities

This Chapter explores the empirical finding of this work and introduces the concept of disinterpellation and mutual mistranslation. Disinterpellation refers to what has been described as the ‘devastating’ psychosocial consequences of disclosing diagnostic information that contests a patient’s gender... see more

Normative Interventions and Inclusive Practices

Drawing on the work of philosopher and ethicist Eva Feder Kittay Surgically shaping children: technology, ethics, and the pursuit of normality. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, pp 90–110, 2006), This chapter explores contemporary tensions relating to atypical sex and the two routes to ... see more

Historical Overview

This Chapter contextualises atypical sex within Western society through presenting a broad historical account of atypical sex treatment within biomedical science and how this treatment has led to the emergence of the intersex patient advocacy movement. It begins by exploring the nineteenth century s... see more

Introduction

Through reference to empirical experience this chapter briefly outlines the primary concern of this book, the difficulty clinicians face in disclosing a diagnosis of atypical sex. It provides an exploration of terminology and explains why the term ‘atypical sex’ is used in place of other more common... see more

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