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Archive 1Archive 2

Gender role and identity

Is "Gender role is the public manifestation of one's gender identity, the things that one says and that one does that gives people a basis for inferring whether one is male, female, or fits neither of those categories.

Since the sex-arbitrary characteristics are matters of convention, and people may choose to flaunt the conventions of their society, people may at times incorrectly infer the sex of an individual on the basis of clothing, occupation, hair length, and other such characteristics that ordinarily serve to reveal the sexual identity that each person's clothing conceals by covering the primary sexual characteristics. In other words, people may incorrectly infer a gender identity (and therefore a sex identity) on the basis of one's gender role. So gender roles can meet the very real social need of people to identify each other by sex while maintaining modesty, yet these roles can be problematical because they can convey a false indication of an individual's sex. They can also be problematical when the gender role favored by an individual (and the individual's own assessment of gender identity) are discordant with that individual's genitalia. " necessary? Some links to gender identity and gender may suffice here. Dysprosia 03:17, 3 Oct 2003 (UTC)

Actually, other people use these terms in a variety of ways, sometimes very carelesssly. They have become "buzz words" I guess, and get thrown around with abandon for that reason. Also, I suspect, some people may have things that they really need to say about their own sexuality and may sieze on some of Money's concepts without necessarily using them the way he would have.
Since Money invented "gender identity" and "gender role" I thought that it be appropriate to peg down the "locus classicus" of these terms. Actually what I based myself on today is only one of many books in which he defines and uses these terms, so "locus classicus" may not be the right name for it. Regardless, I thought it was well worth documenting the origins of these terms. I spent an afternoon working through mentions in one book, and was planning on refining the definitions if I find better formulations in any of his other books.
I included the last paragraph, which you quote above, because it is a development that seems to follow inevitably from Money's own position, and yet it sets up a kind of counter-current that disturbs the original formulation. For instance, Money discusses gender role as something that is entirely the expression of the individual, but other people now discuss gender roles as socially defined expectations that people can comply with or oppose. I don't think that idea is necessarily wrong, but as far as I know Money hasn't looked at the situation from that point of view. (Still looking.)
I discovered this afternoon that I had let my own understanding of these terms be pulled off beam by the self-assured way that others were using them.
The first line quoted above is a close paraphrase of something that Money wrote. I guess I could have quoted such a short thing without breaking fair use requirements for quoting copyrighted works...
I read the book on the botched circumcision and botched attempts to fix the situation by giving the child a normal appearance. (At the time the poor kid's penis was burned off with a cauterizing electric needle I think there wasn't any possibility of surgically creating a penis for him. Too bad he was castrated, however.) I hope I have improved your word choice in one place and brought in a couple of things from my own memory of the case. For what it's worth, I think the book demonized Money a bit. He has always been careful to say that no one factor in gender identity formation determines everything. In the case in question it appears that the brain sex was very firmly masculinized before birth. There was a case recently where a young woman had her Olympic medal taken away from her because she was XY when she took the prescribed sex test. She had no inkling that she was not an XX. Maybe the socialization in a case like that only works when the social environment at home is absolutely placid. It appears that in the case of the boy there was some turmoil. Getting a vagina installed would, in itself, have upset the infant very much. But that can only be speculation. I don't think anybody seriously doubts the gender identity gender role idea and the idea that the apparent (external genital) sex of a person can be discordant with the gender identity. I had a brief correspondence with Milton Diamond on the subject, and he is a major figure in the field who cannot be regarded as a follower of Money.
I put your critique and mine in a section at the bottom.
Patrick0Moran 04:41, 3 Oct 2003 (UTC)
Blast! I see at least one more thing that I need to change in what I wrote. Well, it's late where I am. Later for that change.
Patrick0Moran 04:49, 3 Oct 2003 (UTC)

Web links to add to article

I found the following links on John Money, and am including them here because it's a handy place to "park" them before making any changes to this well-researched article. I would also Iike to do some "cosmetic editing" for style rather than content, but would rather discuss with the main author of this page, as that seems right and natural.

  • book review This is a review of a book that was highly critical of Money.
This is an interesting review of an interesting book. Both the reviewer and the book author have similar points of view. The problem I see is that there would be no easy way to balance the criticism of Money with a more sympathetic view because the reviewer is taking a bank shot at Money and probably nobody wrote what was ostensibly a review of the book in order to defend Money. In order to give a balanced account to defend Money, somebody would have to go through tne entire body of his work and show how his own views have changed since that early period in his life. (He seems to me never to say that he was wrong in decades past, he just writes another book that reflects his emended understanding, and then a few years later he writes a third book. I believe that he would now characterize his early understanding of the process of gender identity formation as overly simple.The book and the review do not take account of that fact.) P0M 02:50, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I'll agree with that. This Psychology Today excerpt is merely a book review, and we don't know the author's credentials. It is a one-sided account of a book that is highly critical of Money. --Otto 19:31, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I am going to add this to the article today, it seems appropriate. --Otto 19:31, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I superimposed one link on top of another, by accident. I am not sure about adding this; it seems rather tangental to me and has nothing to do with Money, and is rather circumspect (ahem). --Otto 19:44, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)
After researching the nature of this website, this can hardly be construed as an NPOV source for Money's writing, and unwittingly causes more controversy on a controversial subject. I won't add these "heretical" links. --Otto 19:31, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)
  • the last may be a violation of copyright laws unless permission is requested from Johns Hopkins Uni.
I can't get to this article. Please check the link. P0M 02:50, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Not sure: are you referring to this one? The story of John/Joan It's the Rolling Stone article by John Colapinto. I feel strongly in favor of this, because Colapinto was the only person to ever interview Reimer. --Otto 19:31, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Or the AMA article I found? I had to sign up for a one-day guest pass to access the article. While it's important because it was written by the two doctors from John Hopkins who originally criticized Money for hiding the Reimer information for so long, I was reluctant to leave a potential copyvio on any page in Wikipedia. I'll have to dig it up again if I can send it to you via email?? Just not sure how to proceed...still new at this! --Otto 19:31, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Would appreciate input on this last one. Otto 00:23, 19 Feb 2005 (UTC)


When I mentioned not being able to access something I think it was the URL that you later removed (?) saying that you had superimposed two. P0M

The Rolling Stones article looks pretty objective to me. (I just buzzed through it very quickly.) Colapinto wrote an entire book on the subject. P0M

I think two things are important to keep in mind: (1) There seems to have been only one such controversial decision in his life, at least only one with any great magnitude. (2) John Money seems to be something of a lightning rod. As such, he probably gets more active detractors than active supporters. But it is always important to be as objective as possible about people and what they have done in life. So the question in my mind would be how to avoid wiping out all his contributions by overloading on the negative side. General MacArthur made a couple of very controversial moves in his career, but we wouldn't want to deny his military genius on account of those negative factors. In his case there are plenty of people who like him well enough to give him praise for the things he did well. I don't think we are going to find an objective career evaluation of Money that we can cite.

It probably would be beyond the scope of a Wikipedia article (and would surely involve original research, which is forbidden to us) to try to describe and evaluate Money's entire career. I think the important thing to do is to explain the intellectual products that have made him important to American life throughout his career. (Most people don't seem to realize that the concepts of "gender identity" and "gender role" that are widely, and frequently very loosely, used today were created by him.) P0M 04:09, 7 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Notes

  • Love and Love Sickness, pages 8-12, 12, 15ff, 24, 32ff, 68, 86-87, 98, 118, 129-131, 144, 146, 151, 167, 191, 192, 215. [ISBN 0-8018-2318-8]
  • Paidika vol. 2, no. 3, 1991

I placed your original reference notes here, on the talk page, if someone should wish to check the information in the article. It seems like a more appropriate place, as it conforms to other articles for format. --Otto 19:05, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)

I don't understand why you think references should go on the talk page. Nobody will find them easily here, and if this talk page gets much longer it will get archived and hardly anybody would ever see the references then, even the people curious enough to look at the discussions. P0M 04:20, 7 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Confusing sentence

For Money, affectional pedophilia is about love and not sex.

For money? Skinnyweed 20:59, 12 June 2006 (UTC)

"Money" is capitalised indicating it is a proper noun, obviously referring to John Money. 172.153.16.33 23:47, 9 July 2006 (UTC)

Reversion

I've just reverted some recent changes, which seemed NPOV and outside the bounds of a reasonable critique. In particular, the addition of Category:Scientific Misconduct was misplaced. While, with the benefit of hindsight, much of what Money did was probably wrong, it was cutting-edge science at the time. Einstein's relativity theory didn't make Pythagoras guilty of scientific misconduct. Perhaps Money clung to his beliefs for too long; and maybe his work did have tragic consequences... BUT ....--Limegreen 03:42, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

RIP. :( Good work, Jokestress. JayW 16:00, 11 July 2006 (UTC)

Money's Bisexuality

I put in a sourced statement about his discreet bisexuality which was reverted. The funny thing is, Money himself would have likely objected to that since he saw nothing shameful about homosexuality, bisexuality and other sexual preferences. The source of the fact was one of Money's closest friends who wrote about his sex life in a book, which I sourced. So, why the revert? Is the idea of a sex researcher and modern authority on sex being bisexual threatning to some editors? Money did not keep his bisexuality a secret. He was, however, discreet because of his prominence in the field. Nobody is outing him since he was never in the closet Lisapollison 03:33, 2 October 2006 (UTC)

FYI, The book that discusses Money's influence on the sexual revolution and his own bisexualtiy (which is all I said in my edit) is WHAT WILD ECSTASY The Rise and Fall of the Sexual Revolution By John Heidenry.Simon & Schuster (March 22, 2002)# ISBN: 0743241843. Available on Amazon. Another independent reference to his bisexuality can be found in a review of this book by the NY Times who certainly would not have printed mere conjecture. Here is the quote:

John Money of Johns Hopkins University, a bisexual who helped make the world bearable for transsexuals by exploring concepts like paraphilia and lovemaps, was himself unable to form the erotic bond he craved after the painful end of a passionate relationship. ROBERT CHRISTGAU Published: April 27, 1997The Pleasure Seekers

I'm sure I can find many more such references. how many do you need? Lisapollison 03:57, 2 October 2006 (UTC)

As per my edit summary [2], there is no need to assume this was a political deletion. This is a topic on which people have strong feelings (as is obvious from your response). Thus, the need for reliable sources is heightened. An author paraphrasing another's beliefs about a third person published in a popular magazine republished on a website that appears to be about a contentious issue is fairly indirect evidence. Both of your subsequent sources remove several links in that chain. --Limegreen 05:14, 2 October 2006 (UTC)
I could get you the exact quotes and page reference from WHAT WILD ECSTASY but I won't fight an edit war. For whatever reason, you are strongly opposed to hasving this well known fact of his bisexuality in the article. Perhaps you feel it is not a fact but a slur. If you were to read Money's books from 1970 forward, you'd see he didn't consider the words Bisexual or Homosexual to be slurs. Clearly it's not about sources because you could simply look it up in WHAT WILD ECSTASY yourself if you cared to. I only added it because how he lived his personal life had a strong effect on his academic stances. Money was also an important figure in the sexual revolution and I'd like to see that covered in the article. if you want to do that work yourself, feel free. I'm done with this. Lisapollison 15:48, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
There is no edit war (or difference of opinion). I challenged your source. You provided one that would generally be considered reliable. You are thus free to re-add the content. This is a total non-issue. Please assume good faith. --Limegreen 00:32, 4 October 2006 (UTC)

Discredited

The article should point out, in the opening paragraph, that Money's ideas are discredited. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 68.175.22.82 (talk) 17:27, 17 December 2006 (UTC).

I don't think that's entirely fair; much of his work on the socialogical basis of gender is discredited, but not absolutely.
I presume you are talking mostly about the David Reimer case, but it is important to note that in several other cases, (i'm trying to find a link) where gender reassignment was relatively sucessful. In that case, the reassignment was done at 6 months instead of 18 months. The grown woman identified as a bisexual woman, however did express "tomboy" traits.
Lwollert 02:51, 2 February 2007 (UTC)

Transsexual Work

I believe that John Money did quite a bit of work with transsexuals, in particular with regard to advocating GRS and coining the term Gender Role
Does anyone have any information on this? Lwollert 02:51, 2 February 2007 (UTC)

His work in those areas and in the more general areas of Gender Identity can be found in some of his books which were cited, most notably:
  1. Money, John, and Patricia Tucker. Sexual Signatures on Being a Man or a Woman. (1975) Little Brown & Co: ISBN 0-316-57825-8
  2. Money, John. Lovemaps: Clinical Concepts of Sexual/Erotic Health and Pathology, Paraphilia, and Gender Transposition in Childhood, Adolescence, and Maturity. New York: Irvington, 1986. ISBN 0-8264-0852-4
  3. Money, John. Gendermaps: Social Constructionism, Feminism, and Sexosophical History. New York: Continuum, 1995. ISBN 0-8264-0852-4
  4. Money, John. The Lovemap Guidebook: A Definitive Statement. Continuum, 1999. ISBN 0-8264-1203-3
  5. Money, John, and Anke Ehrhardt. Man & Woman, Boy & Girl: Gender Identity from Conception to Maturity. Northvale, N.J.: Jason Aronson, 1996. Originally published: Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1972. ISBN 1-56821-812-5

I could go on, but he was so prolific. It's really beyond the scope of this article to try and summarize the evolution of his thoughts and transgender and transexuals. If you are really interested, I could try and compile you a list of academic articles written by others that address his impact in these areas. After his death, there was a an expected amount of looking back over his career and writing about his influence on current theory. Leave me a note on my talk page if you would like that.Lisapollison 22:36, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

removed claims

I removed:

The program was closed in 1979, following the controversial case of David Reimer. Money reported that Reimer was successfully reassigned as female in infancy after a botched circumcision. Money covered up that the reassignment failed, by failing to report the fact that Reimer assumed a male gender role at age 15, which Reimer maintained until his suicide at age 38. Money's theories about the malleability of children's gender identity were discredited by the scientific community, and a media exposé of the Reimer case ensued in the early 2000s.

Wikipedia has been rightly criticized for our willingness to publish unsubstantiated slander. Do you have evidence that Money "covered up" knowledge of a failed outcome? The outcome of Reimer's case was not publicized until Colapinto's Rolling Stone article in 1997, not "2000s". Even Colapinto's account from Reimer describes the last clinical contact with Money when he was around 9 years old in the 1970s. Do you have the slightest shred of evidence that Money covered up anything after that? Do you have a citation that the "sex-reassignment unit" was closed in 1979? If so, it could have had nothing to do with Reimer because no one knew there were problems with the reassignment at that early date. The primary thesis of Money's theory of gender identity formation was that it was primarily a product of social learning, after he saw numerous intersex cases with the same conditions raised successfully as either boys or girls. Reimer's case was a spectacular failure of an attempt to override normal male hormones and normal male rearing up to the end of the second year. The major shift since this case and the bladder exstrophy reversals is that most authorities are now cautiously allowing for the possibility of hormonal or genetic influence on gender identity. alteripse 03:48, 9 April 2007 (UTC)

Alteripse, fancy meeting you here! "The major shift since this case and the bladder exstrophy reversals is that most authorities are now cautiously allowing for the possibility of hormonal or genetic influence on gender identity." You're understating the case. More later. Jonathan Tweet 14:03, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
The disputed statements regarding the Reimer case seem to be regarding the impact of the media exposé, and whether, when, and why Money's theories regarding the malleability of children's gender identity lost credibility in the scientific community. I have moved those concerns here, pending further discussion.
However, the Reimer case is extremely recognizable and perhaps one of the primary things people know about Money, so I have included a mention of it in the lede. More later. Joie de Vivre 18:27, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
It certainly belongs in the intro, but look at the difference between what was there and a more accurate account. I would also like to strip down the redundant Reimer story later in the article, which is entirely recounted in its own David Reimer article. It would be nice if this article actually reflected why Money was considered such a hero for so many years by those who did not think variant sexualities should be stigmatized and shamed. His concepts shaped progressive understanding of sexuality for at least 2 generations, and now everyone takes them for granted without remembering where they came from. In other words, both David Reimer and John Money warrant full, detailed articles. This awkward combination does justice to neither. alteripse 20:09, 11 April 2007 (UTC)

(undent) I have reverted Alteripse's account, for two reasons: such a lengthy description of the Reimer case does not belong in the intro, and it was very poorly written. Alteripse's phrasing, such as "[Reimer] had decided in his teens to become a boy again" is crude and inaccurate in comparison to either the section on Reimer in this article, or the David Reimer article itself.

I do oppose a plan to remove the Reimer account from this article. The Reimer case represents an integral component of Money's career. It is certainly notable. It is critically important to include what happened in the Reimer case, including but not limited to the context of Money's career.

I understand the importance of making this a "full, detailed article", but I don't see how removing or truncating an account of the Reimer case accomplishes that. Joie de Vivre 21:32, 11 April 2007 (UTC)

And tell us what phrase you would use to describe his decision to reassign himself in adolescence? Tell me what you considered "crude and inaccurate". Also, it is quite unfriendly to accuse me of saying things I did not as justification for your reversion. I explicitly said both above and in the rewritten intro that the Reimer story was the most important aspect of popular understanding of Money's career. That does not mean we need a detailed account here that is less detailed and less accurate than the main article. I wrote most of the Reimer article. Well? alteripse 22:05, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
I don't appreciate your tone. I find it hard to respond politely to someone who signs their response with "Well?".
Nevertheless... I don't understand what it accomplishes to rewrite a summary of Reimer case when an account already exists in this article. Indeed, the Reimer case is the most important aspect in popular understanding of Money's career and that is exactly why it should be included here.
I find your addition of another summary of the Reimer case to be confusing since one already exists in this article.
I already gave an example of the crude phrasing. If you plan to delete large sections of this article I recommend building consensus on this page before you do so. Joie de Vivre 22:23, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
You don't understand what is unfriendly, uncivil and insulting? How about "crude and inaccurate". You haven't named a single inaccuracy. You havent explained a single one of your derogatory characterizations. Instead you accuse me of proposing the opposite of what I said. On top of that, you profess to be offended by my "well"??? The sentences you replaced are not as bad as what I initially removed but are still misleading and intellectually dishonest. Do you actually understand the timing of the sequence of events in the Reimer case? Have you actually read the 1997 publications by Diamond and Colapinto? Neither of them accused Money of covering anything up in the 20+ years between Money's publications and last contact at age 9, and Reimer going public with it around age 32. Is your understanding of Money's scholarship and ideas so shallow that a distorted and tendentious version of the Reimer case is the only thing you think worth emphasizing in a description of his career? If your profession of desiring a civil exchange isn't completely empty crap, then how about some specific answers rather than reversions, insults, and misrepresentation? alteripse 00:41, 12 April 2007 (UTC) In fact, just to simplify things, just point out a single "inaccuracy" of my addition, and I will happily let the rest go. And if you can't, how about an apology and an end to the reversions? alteripse 00:57, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
At this diff, I made a sincere attempt to communicate with you. I asked you politely and directly to please identify where I was "uncivil" or "insulting" to you, so that we could address what you felt was a personal concern and return to discussing the article. You chose to respond to my request with personal attacks. I find this unacceptable. If you desire to communicate about this further, there will have to be a mediator involved. Please let me know whether you would like to do that. Joie de Vivre 15:40, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
And I have asked you repeatedly to make good on your claim that you removed "inaccuracy". The differency is I have answered your questions in detail, and you have yet to point out a single inaccuracy in what you repeatedly reverted. I am still waiting either for you to justify the reversion labeled inaccuracy or to apologize for false accusations and stop interfering with improving this article. If you need to bring someone else in to review and explain this to you, feel free. alteripse 23:26, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
WP:NPA. Joie de Vivre 23:35, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
You didn't revert Limegreen's change! And you added an accurate description of the Diamond paper! Very good. Are you beginning to understand the concept that accuracy is better than demonization? My only quibble is your edit summary that implied that Limegreen deleted a ref, when it appeared to me that he simply changed the format -- but perhaps I am wrong. Be very careful to avoid false characterization of other editors actions-- it doesn't win friends. I assume you are a kid who isn't secure enough to admit a mistake and isn't very adept yet at writing clearly. I try to argue fact, backing up with references if asked, and admitting error if someone demonstrates it. If you can learn the same method perhaps we can make this a better article and teach you more about the subject and constructive editing at the same time. And at this point I will drop the sarcasm and wipe your slate clean (or my opinion of it) if you will follow those 3 rules from now on. alteripse 01:35, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
You are still being rude. I am absolutely NOT going to listen to any more rude condescending remarks. You are violating WP:NPA which is "comment on content, not the contributor". I have upheld that by talking only about the content and only addressing personal concerns when you raised them. I have not made any personal comments about you. You have now referred to me as a "kid" and offered the dubious honor of "wiping the slate clean" without offering any apology for your ongoing rudeness. I didn't make ANY "characterization" of an editor, like you just did. See you at the MedCab. Joie de Vivre 16:05, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
And you have still failed to explain your description of "inaccuracy" and again misrepresented what another editor has done. Sorry I yanked your chain, but as you can probably tell, few things annoy me more than unexplained and un-backed-up accusations of inaccuracy. I can disagree with excruciating politeness and respect when you start editing for accuracy and with honesty, and demonstrate an ability to discuss evidence reasonably. Apparently unlike you, I can even admit to being wrong if offered convincing evidence. You are welcome to change tactics and join a rational discussion of the article ongoing below. alteripse 22:09, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
I'm getting the impression that you are unable to stop. Joie de Vivre 15:27, 14 April 2007 (UTC)

To clarify, wikipedia's footnoting system includes the ability to directly link to "http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=9080940&query_hl=8&itool=pubmed_docsum" by putting "PMID 9080940", which is automatically created into that link thus: PMID 9080940. I also took the liberty of linking the reference directly to the full text of the article on Diamond's departmental webpage. There was no reference deleted, only material that was referenced to that article that was not contained in it. I would also like to highlight that although Money is now dead, and so biography of living persons does not apply, serious accusations should be backed up by references. Certainly, Diamond's assessment in 1997 paper was more measured:

Money no longer holds such extreme views but his involvement in one particular case was significant enough that it became a totem in the lay press and a classic for the academic and medical community. And, as quoted above, the textbooks have not kept abreast of the new thinking.

Therefore, I think that suggestions of a deliberate cover-up or fraud on Money's part need to be immaculately referenced to reliable sources. I am certainly not overly familiar with this, but generally scientific fraud is one of the few things that an academic can do to lose tenure, and Money still held a position at Hopkins up until his death. --Limegreen 02:53, 13 April 2007 (UTC)

You are correct in all respects. The primary sources are Money's published accounts (all of which were published before 1977 unless someone can cite later versions of which I am unaware), and then nothing until Diamond and Colapinto's simultaneous accounts in 1997 based mainly on 32 yr old Reimer's memories of childhood events more than 2 decades earlier. According to Colapinto and Reimer, Money's last chance at clinical assessment was when Reimer was 12 years old, plus a brief social visit to the family a year later when Reimer basically refused to talk to him. Reimer himself describes making a conscious decision to resume a male role (what I alluded to as "become a boy again") at 15 years. Though he described all the childhood visits to Money as unpleasant and stressful, and refused to return to see him after age 12, he accepted estrogen treatment at 12 from his local doctors before finally rejecting the female role pressed on him by family and doctors up to that point. I do not know when Money learned that Reimer had resumed a male gender role around 1980; it is not accurate to call anything published before 1980 a "fraud" or a "cover-up", no matter how much certain editors may wish to. Nor is it accurate to call any allusion to the case published by Money between 1980 and 1997 a fraud or a cover-up unless someone has "smoking gun" evidence that Money knew of the gender reversion between those years but continued to promulgate the earlier accounts. To my knowledge, neither Diamond, Colapinto, nor Reimer ever accused him of so doing, at least in print. alteripse 03:45, 13 April 2007 (UTC)

other aspect of Money's career

We can talk both about how much good Money did by advancing concepts in gender studies and about how his core theory proved to be both wrong and supported by slanted reports. Maybe someone can look up Money's accounts of sex play in a certain traditional culture, the details of which I'm forgetting. Anyway, Money's account of what he learned changed over time in support of his idea that kids need to have sex play. That's another example of Money's slippery reports. Jonathan Tweet 13:56, 12 April 2007 (UTC)

  • Good suggestion. Most of what I have read of his work is related to gender identity formation rather than childhood sexuality, but I attended a lecture around 1984 or 85 that he began by showing a slide of a telephoto of two children engaged in sex play and proceeded to argue that every pediatrics department needed a sexologist because nearly all adult sexual problems began in childhood. I won't put my memory in the article but I suspect he has probably published that somewhere. What I wish I could remember was whether he was still publicly using the John/Joan case as an illustration of his theories in the mid-80s-- I think he had stopped mentioning it in print by the late 1970s, but would welcome a citation that proves this wrong. A nitpick: I am not sure that the Reimer case proved his core theory wrong, but rather an extreme extension of it, and by "slanted reports" I assume you are referring to the multiple accounts in the early 70s of the Reimer case rather than suggesting he misrepresented multiple cases or other types of research? alteripse 01:43, 13 April 2007 (UTC)

Rebellion

Reimer was rebelling against his treatment: "rebelled against taking the hormones" (Diamond, 1997) "Joan began to rebel at going for the consultations at the Johns Hopkins Hospital" (Diamond, 1997) It is misleading to claim that the sentence some how implies Reimer was rebelling against his gender identity as Joie de Vivre does in the original edit summary: It's even more misleading to paint Reimer as engaged in "rebellion" rather than "becoming male as he was at birth".[3] It is abundantly clear in the phrase "Reimer rebelled against the care of Money and colleagues", that the rebellion is about the treatment. Diamond (1997) appears to be perhaps the most reliable source for this, so I don't believe there is scope for debate. It is neither an "outrage" or a "distortion (it is an outrage to refer to it as "rebellion". it is a distortion.[4]). Indeed, your use of the word "outrage" and "distortion", without any attempt to reference otherwise, suggests an emotional involvement.--Limegreen 00:21, 14 April 2007 (UTC)

Limegreen, according to the primary sources you are correct again. Money no longer was directly involved in Reimer's treatment after the last trip to Baltimore when Reimer was 13 yrs old. According to Reimer's own account, he rebelled against returning to Baltimore after that age. At 12 he was started on estrogen by his local doctors who were still attempting to carry out the plan outlined by Money years before in support of his female gender development. It was only a couple of years later at about age 14 that he rebelled against this treatment as well. It was at 15 that he completely rebelled against the female gender role and publicly "became a boy again", or reassigned himself back to male (I prefer the former phrase). I cannot think of a better word to describe his rejection of the female assignment and all the treatments involved, but it did not occur as a single event at age 9, but as series of assertions and decisions between 12 and 15 years of age. It was only with the last couple of steps at 14 and 15 that it became obvious to all the local treating doctors that the reassignment was an unequivocal failure (and quite obviously not "teenage rebellion" or whatever our outraged friend thinks you meant). Again, all info is from Reimer/Colapinto and Diamond, and if I have misread either, please offer correction. alteripse 02:18, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
Maybe you should read the friendship article to learn more about what the word "friend" means before you use it to refer to me. You have been many things, but friendly is not one of them. Joie de Vivre 16:42, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
See irony. I assumed you had gotten the fairly unanimous message from all involved in the "mediation", but you chose again to revert a fairly accurate account with the words "outrage" and "distortion" but no evidence or explanation. In fact, if it is any consolation, I just discovered a minor inaccuracy in my own note (12 rather than 9 for last contact) that you might have gotten far more mileage from than your complaints about my "tone". Try focusing on the fact details of the case rather than reacting to "tone" and spewing insupportable accusations of inaccuracy and distortion all over. It will get you more respect from the rest of us. alteripse 17:24, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
Interacting with you has given me new appreciation for editors who refrain from personal attacks when discussing content. Thank you for the contrast. Joie de Vivre 17:34, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
Do you truly not understand what I and at least 3 other editors have been trying to tell you? It was you who attacked and insulted and refused to discuss facts, not me. alteripse 17:53, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
The conversation speaks for itself. Joie de Vivre 17:56, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
At last something on which we can agree! Shall we start over? alteripse 21:17, 14 April 2007 (UTC)

Documentary

Out of interest i Just saw a documentary with David Reimer and his brother in it. David quite clearly commented on "getting into sexual positions with his brother" when he was seven, and David commented that it seemed "sick" to him looking back on it - that Dr Money would do this. Would it be slanderous to print what David has said somewhere or another? I can't remember the name of the doco actually - but it recently aired in NZ. Cheers nic Nic 00:25, 12 June 2007 (NZ time)

It's not slanderous if it is attributed properly to Reimer. If you can find the name of the documentary please post it. Joie de Vivre 12:31, 11 June 2007 (UTC)
Just found this article randomly - it's probably "Dr Money and the Boy with No Penis" from the BBC TV series Horizon. Here's the transcript. Graham87 09:27, 12 June 2007 (UTC)

Pedophilia

The section on pedophilia seemed very confusing ("...pedophilia, including infantophilia (occasionally referred to as nepiophilia), pedophilia and ephebophilia."), so I recast it using the blanket term chronophilia. That left the question of whether it is appropriate to change the pedophilia to chronophilia in the statement of Money's views, since I have seen nothing about what term(s) he actually used. I am thinking we probably should make that change. Also, I changed "the debate" to "debates," because I cannot imagine that there is only one debate on the topic. Peter Chastain (talk) 01:59, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

Brian's "accidental" drug overdose

I have removed the "accidental (?)" in drug overdose of David's twin brother. I have read quite a number of publications and none of them has stated that it was accidental, although they do not state that it was intentional either. Therefore the statement should be left as simply "a drug overdose". --Mizst (talk) 22:52, 1 July 2009 (UTC)

Sex reassignment controversy—David Reimer

After having tried to resolve the dupplication issue of the above mentionne sub section, it appears some did not agree with the modification I made and reverted my edits. This sub section has been signaled as having dupplicated content for 10 months without any visible effort to resolve the issue. Two versions of the account oexisted, one mode detailed than the other. I assuemed, that since a general article exist on David Reimer, which is pointed to by the subsection as a more complete coverage, any detail covered in the main article can be removed from this article. As a result I kept the less detaield version.

Compared to my first edit , I kept the last paragraph, after a carefull reading, since it appears to be the only information not persent either elsewhere in this article or in the david Reimer article.

If you do not agree, which is the nature of wikipedia, plase come discuss it ehre so that we can move to an article of a greater quality, and to not revert my edits without discussing first please. --Dwarfpower (talk) 13:57, 16 September 2011 (UTC)

The edit you've performed now is fine by me; it was precisely the paragraph you preserved this time whose absence I noted. I've been unable to perform much Wikipedia editing recently (busy IRL ;-), where I try to serve in more of an article policing (and preservation) role anyway...
Anyway, Dwarfpower, thanks for making this compromise edit... -- bonze blayk (talk) 17:03, 17 September 2011 (UTC)
Always best to find a compromise here. Took some more time to be more subtle, but was worth it. I understand IRL ;/ --Dwarfpower (talk) 11:46, 18 September 2011 (UTC)

Is it really controversy? I feel only some twisted person could call this controversy, like calling Pedro Alonso Lopez's murders controversial. who would disagree with this mans terrible ways, and acts? 75.80.235.57 (talk) 00:54, 2 May 2015 (UTC)

What is the meaning of Money's term "Phylism" ?

Look here, in his book "Lovemaps". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.181.146.146 (talk) 10:11, 18 August 2012 (UTC)

In the printed edition of this book, the sections "Vocabulary of the Paraphilias, A to Z" and "Glossary of Terms" are included… but are apparently omitted in this online version.  ?
On p. 293 of the print edition, we have
phyletic: of or pertaining to a race. Phyletic components or aspects of behavior in human beings are those shared by all members of the human race, as compared with behavior which is individual and biographically or ontogenetically idiosyncratic. Phyletic behavior is the product of both prenatal and postnatal determinants, as is personal biographic behavior. Each is the end product of both innate and experiential determinants.
phylism: a newly-coined term (Money, 1983) used to refer to an element or unit of response or behavior of an organism that belongs to an individual through its phylogenetic heritage as a member of its species. Synonym, phylon.
phylogeny: in biology, the developmental history of a species, which is the genealogical history shared by all members of the species. See also ontogeny.
So, a phylism would appear to refer to a "standard-issue human behavior in a person", to put it into the vernacular?
Money's thinking is sometimes a bit difficult to work out - in part, because in sexology achieving understanding of behaviors and their causes can be just plain difficult (and they sometimes seem unfathomable), but also in part because he was working on general schemas for understanding human social behavior on a broader scale… not just in sexual behaviors, and the quirks associated with their endowments and enactments, which are the focus of the typical sexologist - and so he often invented new coinages in an effort to clarify his meanings. - thanks! - bonze blayk (talk) 22:01, 20 August 2012 (UTC)


Tips for improving the article:

This article gives a lot of good information about John Money and his impact on psychology and sexology. However, there are some things that I think could be improved. First of all, there are no pictures in the article. It would be beneficial to put a picture of John Money so the reader can get an idea of what he looks like. Also, the side bar at the top of the article that gives his date of birth and death could be expanded to give more information about his background and work. Citations also need to be added to the sexological books section because there are currently none in that section. Lastly, in my opinion, the section about the sexual reassignment of Dave Reimer is too long and has some details that are not necessarily important. It could be made shorter by cutting out some of the not as important information and focusing mainly on the bigger details regarding his case. I hope these suggestions help improve the quality of the article. Cstauch1 (talk) 21:17, 28 February 2015 (UTC)

The article should be focused on the biography of John Money- currently, this section is fairly short with small amounts of detail. The biography talks about the most important episodes of Money's life, but doesn't go into much detail about what he actually accomplished while working at the different organizations, and the innovations he provided to the sciences of psychology and sexology. (example: Money was a professor of pediatrics and medical psychology at Johns Hopkins University from 1951 until his death. What did he accomplish at Hopkins? who did he work with?)Adding detail and examples on the specific periods of Money's life will make the article more accessible and easy to use. Rschwa99 (talk) 21:08, 1 March 2015 (UTC)

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How aged died he?

Since he was born in Newsealand GMT+12 but died in Maryland GMT-4, each specific clocktime is so important, because maybe he physically was 85 years aged when he died. Who knows may tell! 149.205.40.52 (talk) 14:32, 31 August 2017 (UTC)