Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

Info

Gender Cognition

Gender cognition is the interpersonal cognition experienced by the primary observer in presence of stimuli by the one or more secondary observers, where the Gender Cognition Spectrum Index (GCSI) aligns with one another.

Gender cognition refers to the way a human perceives and understand its own gender mentally. This results in qualitative aspects like Gender Identity and Gender expression.

The candidate can withhold both gender identity and gender expression, however doing so surmounts to disrupting the immutability of the biological sex.

Gender cognition here refers to the mental processes related to human consciousness. It is similar to involuntary responses at the subliminal human conscious level, such as involuntary breathing at the conscious level.

Just like breathing, gender cognition is an involuntary aspect of our existence. A human breathes involuntary but upon realisation that the human is breathing, can breathe voluntarily, but cannot control the breathing beyond a point. However, once we become aware of it, the observer can exert some control voluntarily over the gender cognition up to a certain threshold.

In simpler terms, gender cognition is influenced by various factors such as physical attributes, neurological setup such as a neural network in the brain, plasticity of these neural networks, genetic signatures, metabolismic, and microbiome signatures.

Gender Cognition goes beyond sex reproductive organs and encompasses the entire human anatomy. Therefore, an observer's gender identity and expressions are said to be shaped by social, physiological, and psychological aspects while relying on GCSI, but in effect are simple words to describe the variables that only influence the gender cognition.

Each human’s gender cognition depends on the whole corporeality as well as their unexplained human existential cognition. In simpler words, Gender cognition depends on human anatomy, not necessarily only the acutely described biological sex descriptors.

...