Common ground? Does such a thing exist? Here in the USA, we currently have 17 Republican candidates for POTUS, one of whom, thinks he's Hispanic, because he married a woman from Mexico. I'm digressing, but I got a chuckle out of your post Imperious. Not that you intended it to be funny, but thank your. I needed the laugh.
I don’t mind admitting that I don’t see your point. Your example is almost wholly unrelated to what I’m saying, so would you mind clarifying what you’re getting at?
Are you arguing that there’s no such thing as common ground? If so, I don’t think that’s funny in the least; it’s a very worrying approach to the very building blocks of language.
I take major issue with this mindset. I don't doubt that there are "masculine" and "feminine" forces in the universe, ie Ying and Yang, God and Goddess, et cetera, et cetera, but for human beings, in a mundane sense, gender is a social construct.
I disagree.
I'm really talking about
sex which, from a purely reproductive angle, is
not a social construct – it’s a biological and physiological one. This isn’t just exclusive to the human race and is, in fact, an inherent part of evolution amongst the overwhelming majority of species on the earth. We know that there are several asexual species, but they’re clearly not the majority.
There's nothing inherent in someone who is born, say, biologically male that makes that person more inclined to possess "masculine" qualities, be they spiritual or otherwise. Yin and Yang exist in all things and all people, without regard to their gender identity; and it would be foolish to view God and Goddess as corresponding literally to male and female genders.
I agree.
In our use of language, we’ve socially decided to apply certain characteristics as “male”, and certain characteristics as “female”. I find that needlessly obtrusive. Both men and women can be “combative”, a supposedly socially male trait. Both men and women can be “sensitive”, a supposedly socially female trait.
You are, of course, free to use the term warlock if you so desire, and also free to be motivated to do so by your gender identity, but I feel like there's a tendency in occult thinking to reduce the divine "masculine" and "feminine" to a reenforcement of gender binary thinking, which is, again, a human construction.
That’s not what I’m implying, and I apologise if that’s how it came across. Should someone born male consider themselves a witch, or someone born female consider themselves a warlock, then that’s their choice and not something I’d question.
As I hinted in my coven priesthood commentary, the existence of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or intersex people (and their high representation in Witchcraft) is a wonderful thing, and not something that should be used to segregate them. The titular conventions I apply are heuristic, not categorical imperatives.
I hope my view is a bit clearer now.