Charlotte Witt: The Metaphysics of Gender.
Buckley, Benjamin Lee
Charlotte Witt
The Metaphysics of Gender.
Oxford: Oxford University Press 2011.
xiv + 153 pages
$99.00 (cloth ISBN 978-0-19-974041-0); $24.95 (paper ISBN
978-019-974040-2)
Charlotte Witt's treatise, The Metaphysics of Gender, argues
that gender essentialism is true, given specific definitions of
"gender" and "essentialism". The thesis is meant to
bridge the gap between the diverse nature of gender, on the one hand,
and the pervasive effects of one's gender on multiple arenas of
life, on the other. The argument is backed by an ontological theory of
the self, bringing Witt's theory from social philosophy into
metaphysics. While her social analysis is insightful and sufficiently
nuanced, her trinitarian theory of the self is problematic. Her rich
ontology is perhaps too rich; she does not avoid the Cartesian dualism
she wishes to avoid; and part of her argument is dangerously close to
circular.
To overview Witt's use of terms: Gender is metaphysically
"uniessential" to humans. X is uniessential for Y if X unifies
the disparate parts of Y into one coherent whole. The functional
property of shelter is uniessential to a house; without the unifying
property, the house would be lumber. It is not kind essentialism (a
property essential for an object to be classified as a particular kind);
but individual essentialism (what makes an individual what it is).
Gender, according to Witt, is separate but related to biological sex;
gender is a social role, assigned due to others' perceptions of our
biology. One is given the role of being a man or being a woman through
the "socially mediated reproductive (or engendering) functions that
an individual is recognized (by others) to perform" (18). One is
assigned to one gender role or another by the normative belief that we
ought to take either the begetting or the bearing role in childbirth.
Once assigned these roles, we become "responsive to and evaluable
under" the myriad of features which comprises our culture's
view of gender.
Witt argues that the social role of gender unifies our entire
relational existence to other human beings. It underpins and undergirds
every social role in which we participate. Witt's argument for this
conclusion is metaphysical in nature. The self has three components: the
human organism, the person, and the social individual. Each is a
separate (or at least separable) ontological category. The
'organism' is the human physiology. The 'person' is
necessarily self-conscious and autonomous. A highly intelligent primate
would count as a person, as would angels, should they exist; babies
would not. The 'social individual' necessarily takes roles in
relationships with other social individuals. Some roles are by choice
and consciously held, but many are not. The organism constitutes the
person and the social individual the way marble constitutes a statue--it
is the organic stuff undergirding the more complex entity. The person
and the social individual are related to each other because they are
both constituted by the same organic entity. Thus, the person takes
roles in social relationships, but not necessarily, only accidentally;
the social individual is self-reflective, not necessarily, but only
accidentally. These two share properties because they are tied together
by the same meat. They interact and influence each other but they are
metaphysically separate.
Uniessentialism applies only to the social individual. The social
individual holds positions in multiple relationships, simultaneously and
diachronically. These social roles would proliferate ontology beyond
toleration unless they are unified into a coherent whole; Witt proposes
that gender itself is what unifies the social individual. It is a
"mega social role" that impacts and influences the way in
which we hold every other role. Thus, gender is uniessential to the
social individual, and thus uniessential to humans.
To elevate her conclusion from a social analysis of the importance
of gender to a metaphysical claim about the essential nature of the
self, Witt needs a trinitarian ontology; however, such ontology
proliferates entities beyond necessity. One can, as many have before,
view the self as one object with different aspects, such as the
self-reflective aspect and the social aspect. To use her example of
Michelangelo's Pieta, the statue is in fact made out of marble, but
"work of art" and "object of religious veneration"
are not two separate ontological categories accidentally tied together
by the same lump of rock; rather, they are two of many aspects of the
one object, two functions of the same ontological entity. Leibniz's
principle works quite handily here: the work-of-art Pieta and the
object-of-religious-veneration Pieta have all of the same properties,
admired for its craft by some and religiously venerated by others, in
addition to having the same weight, size, etc. Should they share all of
the same properties, then "they" are the same object, not two
distinct ones. Similarly with the self: Witt allows (Chapter 5) that
when united in a human self, the person and the social individual share
all of the same properties; only the modality of their properties
changes. Thus, the social individual is necessarily social but only
accidentally self-reflective, and vice versa for the person; yet, they
share the same properties and thus Leibniz's law applies.
The modal argument--that a social individual exists because it
necessarily participates in social relationships--is one of two
arguments given for Witt's new ontology. The other leg of support
is very close to being circular. Witt argues that we should accept her
trinitarian ontology because the existence of the social individual is
the only way to make the statement "gender is essential" a
coherent one. Gender cannot attach to the human organism, as gender is
only tangentially attached to biology. Gender essentialism cannot be
coherently claimed of the self-reflective 'person', either, as
gender goes beyond how one sees oneself; the social norms of gender
often apply to us without our permission, consent, or awareness. Thus,
feminists should allow the social individual into our ontology in order
to make sense of the claim of gender essentialism, if only to deny its
truth. While not precisely question-begging, this borders on the
circular at least: in effect, the reader is asked to accept the premise
of Witt's argument because it is the only way to comprehend her
desired conclusion. Further, the traditional denial of gender
essentialism--that social, political, and functional capacities of a
human are not determined by their reproductive physiology--can be
coherently formulated without positing a separate entity called
'the social individual' to which we can attach gender. All
that is required is that a human being is more than their physiology
alone.
Finally, Witt claims that her ontology of the self is compatible
with feminist aims in the metaphysics of the self, in that it avoids
Cartesian mind-body dualism and includes an analysis of the intrinsic
social nature of a human. However, her argument falls short on both
counts. The body and the person are separable on her view, and the
person is not inherently embodied; the person and the social individual
are separable as well. Further, the essential nature of the self is
personhood: "Only persons--beings who are capable of
self-consciousness--are selves, but the process of self-reflection is
mediated by our practical identities or social roles" (110). A self
is a person, and thus necessarily self-reflective and autonomous, and
only accidentally embodied or social. This does not avoid Cartesian
dualism, it repeats it. Further, her argument that social individuals
are necessarily embodied (while persons are not) fails: she argues that
many social roles require embodiment and that social individuals
therefore must be embodied. However, "many" is far from
"all"; if Witt allows for the possibility of disembodied
angels being persons, then all we need is to allow that such angels
could have a social structure of their own, and/or stand in social
relations to humans, in order to prove that there could be disembodied
social individuals.
On a final note, the essentialism that Witt argues for is
strikingly ... nonessentialist. "[U]nification essentialism is not
formulated using modal notions (possibility, necessity)" (21). Witt
argues that gender ties together a social individual intrinsically, but
not necessarily. Should human science evolve beyond the necessity of
sexual reproduction, gender (which, recall, is based on society assuming
that one should take a particular role in sexual reproduction) would
disappear and something else would have to take its place as the
unifying factor among our diverse social roles. Thus, gender is
important, but not actually essential in the sense of being necessary.
This claim seems at odds with Witt's defense of gender as the
"mega social role" that unifies a human being over other
possible candidates such as race. Her argument that race is not the one
unifying mega social role is that ideas of race vary from culture to
culture, from context to context, and thus might, for an individual in a
particular context, influence every other social role they occupy, but
cannot count as the one true mega social role. However, admitting that
gender itself is dependent on our particular context--no matter how
entrenched and long-lasting that context may be--is to suggest that it,
too, is only accidentally, and not essentially, uniessential.
In sum, the Metaphysics of Gender presents a nuanced and
interesting analysis of the way gender functions in a multiplicity of
social contexts; however, the overarching argument is based on some
unconvincing metaphysical arguments.
Benjamin Lee Buckley
Clayton State University