What I am asking you is very simple: if you wrote a book with a non-binary main character, for which we have established that the pronoun for such a person is ''they'', does that book actually make sense if we now have a person with a description that makes them sound as if they are multiple people?BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Sep 06, 2020 8:00 pmI've used they for when the gender is ambiguous. I don't look at every single person on the street and start calling them they, nor am I resorting to some dumb hypothetical where there is no such thing as gender anymore.clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Sep 06, 2020 7:48 pmYou've done what your whole life? Read books where you've swapped out he and she with they? I literally don't know what you just wrote.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Sep 06, 2020 12:01 pmThe f are you even talking about? I've done that my whole life.clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Sep 06, 2020 10:06 amHere's a fun exercise for those of you who still do not get what I mean: pick up a novel. Any novel. I'm sure you have one. Read it, and mentally transpose every usage of the word ''he'' and ''she'' with the word ''they'' and then come back to me. Gee, it really comes off as a book where the human race has been assimilated by the Borg doesn't it?
Are you really telling me that it's unheard to be aware of a person without being aware of their gender, and that you resort to referring to someone as "it?"
I feel as if we are talking about two different things here.