Mutilation, deception, and sex changes.

Abstract:

:The paper considers and rejects two arguments against the performance of sexual reassignment surgery. First, it is argued that the operation is not mutilating, but functionally enabling. Second, it is argued that the operation is not objectionably deceptive, since, if there is such a thing as our 'real sex', we do not know (ordinarily) what it is. The paper is also intended to shed light on what our sexual identity is and on what matters in sexual relations. :Lavin discusses and rejects two arguments against the morality of sex reassignment surgery (SRS) for transsexuals. He answers those who claim that SRS is mutilating by arguing that it is enabling because it permits transsexuals to function as the sex they perceive themselves to be. Critics who say that SRS camouflages a person's real sex and deceives others are countered with Lavin's argument that one does not really know, but can only conjecture, what sex he or she is, and therefore cannot deliberately deceive others about it. In the course of his essay, Lavin discusses whether sex is biologically or psychologically determined, the moral insignificance of sex, and examples of disharmony between the genotype and phenotype of sex.

journal_name

J Med Ethics

authors

Lavin M

doi

10.1136/jme.13.2.86

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

1987-06-01 00:00:00

pages

86-91

issue

2

eissn

0306-6800

issn

1473-4257

journal_volume

13

pub_type

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