Write 3 paragraphs for reflection and should be do the following:
1. In first paragraph, Summarize the article (attached below).
(Don't plagiarism from article. Please use your own words
to summarize article below)
2. In second paragraph, Connect the article with one of those
"biological variation in modern humans" or "cultural anthropology"
or "how identity and worldview are deeply influenced by cultural
upbringing" or "human pre-history, human social interaction, and
human cultures". Be specific about the connections you make.
3. In third paragraph, Include your own reflection on what you’ve
read/learned. What do you think about it?
Article Here: "What Our Skeletons Say About the
Sex Binary"
Society increasingly accepts gender identity as existing along a
spectrum. The study of people, and their remains, shows that sex
should be viewed the same way. She wasn’t especially tall. Her
testosterone levels weren’t unusually high for a woman. She was
externally entirely female. But in the mid-1980s, when her
chromosome results came back as XY instead of the “normal” XX for a
woman, the Spanish national team ousted hurdler María José
Martínez-Patiño. She was ejected from the Olympic residence and
deserted by her teammates, friends, and boyfriend. She lost her
records and medals because of a genetic mutation that wasn’t proven
to give her any competitive advantage. People like Martínez-Patiño
have been ill-served by rules that draw a hard line between the
sexes. In the U.S., the Trump administration looks set to make
things worse. According to a memo leaked to The New York Times in
October, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is trying
to set up a legal binary definition of sex, establishing each
person “as male or female based on immutable biological traits
identifiable by or before birth.” But our bodies are more
complicated than that. An increasing recognition of this complexity
by researchers and the public has affirmed that gender sits on a
spectrum: People are more and more willing to acknowledge the
reality of nonbinary and transgender identities, and to support
those who courageously fight for their rights in everything from
all-gender bathrooms to anti-gender-discrimination laws. But
underlying all of this is the perception that no matter the gender
a person identifies as, they have an underlying sex they were born
with. This represents a fundamental misunderstanding about the
nature of biological sex. Science keeps showing us that sex also
doesn’t fit in a binary, whether it be determined by genitals,
chromosomes, hormones, or bones (which are the subject of my
research). The perception of a hard-and-fast separation between the
sexes started to disintegrate during the second wave of feminism in
the 1970s and 1980s. In the decades that followed, we learned that
about 1.7 percent of babies are born with intersex traits; that
behavior, body shape, and size overlap significantly between the
sexes, and both men and women have the same circulating hormones;
and that there is nothing inherently female about the X chromosome.
Biological realities are complicated. People living their lives as
women can be found, even late in life, to be XXY or XY. Skeletal
studies, the field that I work in as a doctoral student in
anthropology, and the history of this field show how our society’s
assumptions about sex can lead to profound mistakes, and how
acknowledging that things are not really as binary as they may seem
can help to resolve those errors. Trump and his advisers should
take note.
If you’ve ever watched the TV series Bones, you’ve heard Temperance
“Bones” Brennan, the show’s protagonist and star forensic
anthropologist, call out to her colleagues whether the skeleton
she’s analyzing is male or female. That’s because sex distinctions
are very helpful to know for missing persons and archaeological
sites alike. But just how easy is it to make this determination? In
the early 1900s, the U.S.-based anthropologist Aleš Hrdlička helped
to found the modern study of human bones. He served as the first
curator of physical anthropology at the U.S. National Museum (now
the Smithsonian Institution). The skeletons Hrdlička studied were
categorized as either male or female, seemingly without exception.
He was not the only one who thought sex fell into two distinct
categories that did not overlap. Scientists Fred P. Thieme and
William J. Schull of the University of Michigan wrote about sexing
a skeleton in 1957: “Sex, unlike most phenotypic features in which
man varies, is not continuously variable but is expressed in a
clear bimodal distribution.” Identifying the sex of a skeleton
relies most heavily on the pelvis (for example, females more often
have a distinctive bony groove), but it also depends on the general
assumption that larger or more marked traits are male, including
larger skulls and sizable rough places where muscle attaches to
bone. This idea of a distinct binary system for skeletal sex
pervaded—and warped—the historical records for decades. In 1972,
Kenneth Weiss, now a professor emeritus of anthropology and
genetics at Pennsylvania State University, noticed that there were
about 12 percent more male skeletons than females reported at
archaeological sites. This seemed odd, since the proportion of men
to women should have been about half and half. The reason for the
bias, Weiss concluded, was an “irresistible temptation in many
cases to call doubtful specimens male.” For example, a particularly
tall, narrow-hipped woman might be mistakenly cataloged as a man.
After Weiss published about this male bias, research practices
began to change. In 1993, 21 years later, the aptly named Karen
Bone, then a master’s student at the University of Tennessee,
Knoxville, examined a more recent dataset and found that the bias
had declined: The ratio of male to female skeletons had balanced
out. In part that might be because of better, more accurate ways of
sexing skeletons. But also, when I went back through the papers
Bone cited, I noticed there were more individuals categorized as
“indeterminate” after 1972 and basically none prior. Allowing
skeletons to remain unsexed, or “indeterminate,” reflects an
acceptance of the variability and overlap between the sexes. It
does not necessarily mean that the skeletons classified this way
are, in fact, neither male nor female, but it does mean that there
is no clear or easy way to tell the difference. As science and
social change in the 1970s and 1980s revealed that sex is
complicated, the category of “indeterminate sex” individuals in
skeletal research became more common and improved scientific
accuracy.
For generations, the false perception that there are two distinct
biological sexes has had many negative indirect effects. It has
muddied historical archaeological records, and it has caused
humiliation for athletes around the globe who are closely
scrutinized. In the mid-1940s, female Olympic athletes went through
a degrading process of having their genitals inspected to receive
“femininity certificates.” This was replaced by chromosome testing
in the late 1960s and subsequently, hormone testing. But instead of
rooting out imposters, these tests just illustrated the complexity
of human sex. It might be more convenient for the U.S. federal
government to have a binary system for determining legal sex; many
U.S. laws and customs are built on this assumption. But just
because it’s a convenient system of classification doesn’t mean
it’s right. Some countries, such as Canada, and some states in the
U.S., including Oregon, now allow people to declare a nonbinary
gender identity on their driver’s license or other identification
documents. In a world where it is apparently debatable whether
anti-discrimination laws apply to sex or gender, it is a step in
the wrong direction to be writing either one into law as a strictly
binary phenomenon. The famous cases of strong, athletic, and
audacious female athletes who have had their careers derailed by
the Olympic “gender tests” exemplify how misguided it is to
classify sex or gender as binary. These women are, like all of us,
part of a sex spectrum, not a sex binary. The more we as a society
recognize that, the less we will humiliate and unnecessarily
scrutinize people—and the less discriminatory our world will
be.
The article outlines the holes in the findings of skeletons that were neither considered male nor female according to the sex binary system and hence the existence of long sex spectrum. A spanish woman Martinez Patino who was found to be XY instead of normal XX was ill treated because of the genetic mutation. This is the result of strict lines that have been drawn between the sexes in sex binary. But various findings suggest that two distinct biological sexes is a false perception instead society must recognize that we are a part of sex spectrum to prevent unnecessary humiliation and scrutinization of people.
Humans must understand that human variation differ in distribution and frequency of traits. These results are multifactorial, that occurs not only due to genetic mutations but also due epigenetics and various environmental factors. The actions of genes is although very crucial but seems to be dynamic and modifiable according to the ongoing researches. Human traits and differences in the diseases by 'continental ancestry' are as much the result of non genetic factors as genetic factors.
There must be rules and regulations for proper recognition of those who do not lie on distinct category of binary sex but are part of sex spectrum. There must be non binary gender identity for important documents like driving licences. Such people should be given equal rights and respect in society. There must be common awareness about the existence and biology of gender spectrum so that people are well educated and do not pretend to be unconscious.
Write 3 paragraphs for reflection and should be do the following: 1. In first paragraph, Summarize...
Write 3 paragraphs for reflection and should be do the following: 1. In first paragraph, Summarize the article (attached below). 2. In second paragraph, Connect the article with one of those "Fossil, artifact, and genetic" or "The theories and evidence regarding the origins of anatomically modern humans". Be specific about the connections you make. 3. In third paragraph, Include your own reflection on what you’ve read/learned. What do you think about it? Article Here: "Neanderthal artists made oldest-known cave paintings"...
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