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- W336885802 abstract "It is widely agreed that certain categories – such as, typically, gender, race, sexual orientation, or mental illness – are social constructs rather than “real” natural joints. There are different ways to understand social constructivism, but a plausible distinction is that made between causal and constitutive social constructivism. Causal constructivism is a thesis about there being social causes for the existence of certain types, facts or properties of individuals or groups; constitutive constructivism is a thesis about certain types, facts or properties of individuals being constitutively social. Constructivism is usually seen as an anti-essentialist position, but whether or not this is so may depend on which kind of constructivism is held. In particular, it would seem that causal constructivism is more compatible with anti-essentialism than constitutive constructivism. In this article, I review some arguments for the social construction of gender and race, and some arguments against the social construction of gender. I try to assess some of the consequences of endorsing causal constructivism vs. constitutive constructivism." @default.
- W336885802 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W336885802 date "2014-01-01" @default.
- W336885802 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W336885802 title "É o Género uma Construção Social" @default.
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