Not Strictly a Woman—QUD-Based Four-Valent Reasoning Discharges Lexical Meaning
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Starting Point
| (1) | a. | Scenario glass ceiling: An agency provides funding for a ‘Fight the glass ceiling |
| in academia’ event with the goal of providing tools to counteract gender-related | ||
| imposter syndrome, gender CV bias, etc. According to the invitation, the event | ||
| is ‘for women only’. | ||
| b. | Trans woman Tammy (identifies as a woman) wants to join. (x = Tammy) invite! | |
| c. | Non-binary person Noa (transmasculine, does not identify as a woman, mostly | |
| read female, suffering from imposter syndrome) wants to join. (x = Noa) invite! | ||
| d. | Trans man Mario (does not identify as a woman, transitioned as a teenager, | |
| always read male) wants to join. (x = Mario) invite? | ||
| e. | Assigned-male-at-birth Quinn (recently started questioning their gender, is | |
| unsure whether they identify as a woman, always read male and masculine- | ||
| presenting) wants to join. (x = Quinn) invite? | ||
| f. | Cis man Chris (has never questioned his gender, does not identify as a woman, | |
| perceived as masculine and determinate) wants to join. (x = Chris) do not invite. | ||
| g. | 〚x is a woman〛 = 1 iff …?! |
1.2. Preview and Structure
1.3. Methodological Remark
2. Like a Woman—Truth and Issue-Based Acceptability
2.1. Political Background: Gender Invitation Policies
| (2) | 〚x is a woman〛 = 1 iff x self-identifies as a woman |
| (3) | a. | Scenario glass ceiling |
| b. | Trans woman Tammy (identifies as a woman) wants to join. (x = Tammy) invite! | |
| c. | Non-binary person Noa (transmasculine, does not identify as a woman, mostly | |
| read female, suffering from imposter syndrome) wants to join. (x = Noa) invite! |
| (4) | a. | 〚x is a woman1〛 = 1 iff x self-identifies as a woman |
| ⟶ Tammy invited, Noa not invited, no-one misgendered. | ||
| b. | 〚x is a woman2〛 = 1 iff x was assigned female at birth | |
| ⟶ Tammy not invited, Noa invited, both misgendered. | ||
| c. | 〚x is a woman3〛 = 1 iff x is low on the patriarchal hierarchy | |
| ⟶ Tammy and Noa invited, Noa misgendered. | ||
| d. | 〚x is a woman4〛 = 1 iff x has an F in their passport | |
| ⟶ invitation and misgendering depend on law and bureaucracy. |
2.2. Linguistic Background: Non-Maximality and Vagueness, Haslinger (2022)
| (5) | The windows are open. |
| (6) | a. | Scenario thunderstorm: Ann and Bea left their flat. A thunderstorm is coming. |
| A total of 4 of the 10 windows face the direction of the wind and are 2 m wide; | ||
| the other 6 are small bathroom windows. Unfortunately, Ann left exactly the | ||
| four most crucial windows open before leaving. Ann: Oh no!… | ||
| b. | The windows are open!10 QUD: Will our flat be flooded? | |
| Issue parameter: The 4 large windows being open has the same effect on the | ||
| flat during a thunderstorm as 10 windows being open. It is unclear whether | ||
| this is also the case for three, two, or one large window being open. If no large | ||
| windows are open, the flat will be fine. Bathroom windows do not matter. |
- The idea of issue-based accounts of non-maximality (like [2]) is that non-maximal readings arise whenever the issue parameter is such that some other configuration (of open and closed windows in our case) has the same effect for resolving the QUD as the maximal case (where all windows are open). A strong argument in favor of such a treatment is the fact that which window is open—a big one or a small bathroom window—can make a difference, not just their number. Even if six bathroom windows (and no others) were open, (5) would end up unacceptable (our terminology; [1] speaks of ‘pragmatic truth/falsity’). Once both the QUD and issue parameter are specified enough to provide a clear clustering or non-clustering of the given case (4 large windows open) with the maximal case (10 windows open), the sentence is either clearly acceptable or clearly unacceptable.
2.3. Linguistic Background: Issue-Based Acceptability
| (7) | a. | Scenario thunderstorm: Ann and Bea left their flat. A thunderstorm is coming. |
| A total of 4 of the 10 windows face the direction of the wind and are 2 m wide, | ||
| while the other 6 are small bathroom windows. Unfortunately, Ann left exactly | ||
| the four most crucial windows open before leaving. Ann: Oh no!… | ||
| b. | The windows are open! QUD: Will our flat be flooded? | |
| Issue parameter: The 4 large windows being open has the same effect on the | ||
| flat during a thunderstorm as 10 being windows open. It is unclear whether | ||
| this is also the case for three, two, or one large window being open. If no large | ||
| windows are open, the flat will be fine. Bathroom windows do not matter. |
| (8) | a. | Scenario paint: Ann and Bea left their newly painted flat. The paint requires |
| maximal ventilation. Four of ten windows are open. Bea: Did you leave everything | ||
| like the instructions say? Ann: Yes! … | ||
| b. | ??The windows are open! QUD: Will the paint dry? | |
| Issue parameter: At least 9 of 10 windows must be open for the paint to dry | ||
| sufficiently. |
| (9) | a. | Scenario thunderstorm II: Ann and Bea left their flat. A thunderstorm is coming. |
| Luckily, none of the 10 windows face the direction of the wind and all of them | ||
| are protected from an outside roof. Only if all of them are open is any damage | ||
| to the flat realistic. Ann left 4 of these windows open before leaving. Ann: Oh | ||
| no!… | ||
| b. | #The windows are open! QUD: Will our flat be flooded? | |
| Issue parameter: Four windows open has the same effect on the flat during a | ||
| thunderstorm as no windows being open. Only 10 windows being open causes | ||
| flooding. |
2.4. Application: Issue-Dependence in the Glass Ceiling Case
| (10) | a. | Scenario glass ceiling QUD: Is x low on the patriarchal hierarchy? |
| Issue parameter: Women are low on the patriarchal hierarchy. Anyone who is | ||
| routinely affected by disadvantages due to gender CV bias, being mansplained | ||
| at, gendered credibility deficit, gendered imposter syndrome, sexist remarks, | ||
| etc., in the workplace is also low on the patriarchal hierarchy. Anyone who | ||
| only occasionally experiences some of these things is in the tolerance range. | ||
| b. | Trans woman Tammy (identifies as a woman) wants to join. (x = Tammy) | |
| invite! | ||
| c. | Non-binary person Noa (transmasculine, does not identify as a woman, mostly | |
| read female, suffering from imposter syndrome) wants to join. (x = Noa) | ||
| invite! | ||
| d. | x is a woman. True for Tammy (10-b), false but acceptable for Noa (10-c). |
3. Vaguely Like a Woman—Tolerant Acceptability
3.1. Political Background: Slippery Slope-Ism
| (11) | a. | Scenario glass ceiling QUD: Is x low on the patriarchal hierarchy? |
| Issue parameter: Women are low on the patriarchal hierarchy. Anyone who is | ||
| routinely affected by disadvantages due to gender CV bias, being mansplained | ||
| at, gendered credibility deficit, gendered imposter syndrome, sexist remarks, | ||
| etc., in the workplace is also low on the patriarchal hierarchy. Anyone who | ||
| only occasionally experiences some of these things is in the tolerance range. | ||
| b. | Trans man Mario (does not identify as a woman, transitioned as a teenager, | |
| always read male) wants to join. (x = Mario) invite? | ||
| c. | Assigned-male-at-birth Quinn (recently started questioning their gender, is | |
| unsure whether they identify as a woman, always read male and masculine- | ||
| presenting) wants to join. (x = Quinn) invite? | ||
| d. | Cis man Chris (has never questioned his gender, does not identify as a woman, | |
| perceived as masculine and determinate) wants to join. (x = Chris) do not in- | ||
| vite. |
3.2. Linguistic Background: Vagueness
| (12) | a. | Scenario paint 2: Ann and Bea left their newly painted luxury estate. The paint |
| requires maximal ventilation in order to dry. A total of 70 of the 100 windows | ||
| of their mansion are open. B: Did you leave everything like the instructions say? A: | ||
| Yes!… | ||
| b. | ?The windows are open! QUD: Will the paint dry? | |
| Issue parameter: A total of 95–100 open windows clearly suffice for the paint | ||
| to dry; 1–50 windows clearly do not suffice; for 51–94 windows, it is unclear. |
| (13) | a. | Susi, who is 2 m tall, is tall. |
| b. | Any person who is only a millimeter less tall than a tall person is also tall. | |
| c. | Mimi, who is 1.999 m tall, is tall. (etc.) | |
| d. | Max, who is 1.4 m tall, is tall. |
3.3. Application: Tolerant Acceptability in the Glass Ceiling Case
| (14) | a. | Scenario glass ceiling QUD: Is x low on the patriarchal hierarchy? |
| Issue parameter: Women are low on the patriarchal hierarchy. Anyone who is | ||
| routinely affected by disadvantages due to gender CV bias, being mansplained | ||
| at, gendered credibility deficit, gendered imposter syndrome, sexist remarks, | ||
| etc., in the workplace is also low on the patriarchal hierarchy. Anyone who | ||
| only occasionally experiences some of these things is in the tolerance range. | ||
| b. | Trans man Mario (does not identify as a woman, transitioned as a teenager, | |
| always read male) wants to join. (x = Mario) invite? | ||
| c. | Assigned-male-at-birth Quinn (recently started questioning their gender, is | |
| unsure whether they identify as a woman, always read male and masculine- | ||
| presenting) wants to join. (x = Quinn) invite? | ||
| d. | Cis man Chris (has never questioned his gender, does not identify as a woman, | |
| perceived as masculine and determinate) wants to join. (x = Chris) do not in- | ||
| vite. | ||
| e. | x is a woman. Tolerantly acceptable for Mario (14-b) and Quinn (14-c), | |
| unacceptable for Chris (14-d). |
4. Open Issues
4.1. Modelling Ethically Bad Use of Gender Terms
4.2. A Probabilistic Extension?
4.3. Consequences for the Pragmatics–Semantics Interface
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| QUD | Question under Discussion |
| TERF | Trans-exclusionary ‘radical feminist’ |
| 1 | We are not making any assumptions about the nature of this choice/‘choice’. |
| 2 | We take misgendering to be equivalent with not respecting someone’s gender self-ID. |
| 3 | We do not claim that our solution is how most people actually use the term woman in current English. If, however, our political goal was impossible to obtain on linguistic grounds, it would be subject to a ‘ought implies can’ objection. We propose a use of woman that may currently be used by some speakers but might in principle be acquired by everyone, because QUD and vagueness are elements of natural languages anyway. At the same time, we point to a set of possible tools for modeling (what is wrong with) non-optimal actual uses of gender terminology, see Section 4.1. |
| 4 | By ‘low on the patriarchal hierarchy’ we mean ‘low on the gender-related hierarchy that comes with patriarchal societies’, or roughly ‘highly vulnerable to discrimination because of (actual or perceived) gender’. We use ‘subject to patriarchal discrimination’ interchangeably. |
| 5 | We are treating self-identification as a black-box. Many people do report causal relations between self-ID and some of the other aspects (like body schema, clothing, etc.) often associated with gender. However, neither of them is a reliable predictor of self-ID. We are not making any claims about the metaphysics of gender here. |
| 6 | We are aware that gender-fluidity contrasted with retrospective self-ID complicates things. Nonetheless, we have to exclude the time component for matters of space. |
| 7 | A variant of Noa where they are non-binary and transfeminine (so assigned male at birth) would lead to the same outcome, stressing current, external discrimination more and previously internalized discrimination less. |
| 8 | Yes, trans women are low on the patriarchal hierarchy. See also Section 4.1 and Section 4.2 for the importance of this implication. |
| 9 | Even if none of the internal narratives discussed here play a role in a given context of a Glass ceiling meeting, announcing most feminist events with the less accessible phrasing gives rise, in a toxic political society, to narrations along the lines of ‘wanting to cancel the existence of women’ and ‘queerfeminists building their elitist bubble’. While the latter is a misconception of most queerfeminist environments, a true core of it (that can then be exploited for further hate and discrimination) can be the following: using only the less accessible phrasing merely declares contexts to be such that it should be common ground what ‘subject to gender-based discrimination or gender bias’ means. We argue that, rather than declaring contexts such, contexts should be made such by including and empowering people who do not share a feminist common ground on their oppression yet. Of course, if we know it to be very likely that none of the narratives above play a role in a given context, it is legitimate to phrase the invitation like this—for example, if we know that everyone in the target group at a given institute has already attended a first feminist event earlier that has prepared them to understand that they are meant by ‘people who are subject to gender-based discrimination or gender bias’. The problem we discuss in this paper, however, remains for all other cases. |
| 10 | Empirical support for non-maximal readings of the structurally analogous sentence ‘The squares are green’ comes from [7]. |
| 11 | See e.g., [11] for a more complete picture of QUDs. |
| 12 | While [2] suggest that QUD-sensitivity has to be introduced by elements like the and is otherwise absent, there is independent discussion [12] of QUD-sensitivity as the default. QUD-insensitivity would have to be introduced, e.g., by universal quantifiers who would act as filters of QUDs. While the cases we discuss do obviously not involve definite determiners, we suspect that the parallel is not coincidental and should be traced back to general principles of context- and QUD-sensitivity. |
| 13 | We thank an anonymous reviewer for pushing us to comment on this point with regard to Quinn and Mario (Section 3.3). We take this issue to be even more pressing in the strictly pragmatically acceptable case of Noa. Being a trans-masculine non-binary person themself, the first author of this paper would not feel misgendered by the sort of pragmatic acceptability involved here, if they were Noa. On the contrary, they embrace the idea of being in the same relation to a woman as are the 4 open windows to the 10 open windows: They are just really not the same, but the circumstances cluster them together. That said, we cannot speak for everyone belonging to this group. But remember also that we are dealing with an ethical dilemma that might not be resolvable without doing any harm at all. Much practical philosophical work has to be done in weighting misgendering, exclusion and unaccessibility/classism harm in cases like Glass ceiling. Practically speaking, our account is probably best realized by making the pragmatically added group explicit in order to avoid ambiguities in a world where different people use very different notions of woman—for example, by inviting ‘women and everyone else who is discriminated against based on gender’. This is, however, not the main focus of our paper. |
| 14 | Instead, still excluding Tammy from the event would come down to not granting her first person authority based on what she says is her gender (cf. [13]). |
| 15 | …although Chris is an artificially clear case and the exclusion of any individual is arguably often not the best solution to structural problems, which is especially relevant in similar cases with the goal of providing maximal safety at a party. |
| 16 | We treat the scale of ‘being low on the patriarchal hierarchy’ as linear for purely technical reasons in our model—it suffices to provide the intuitively correct results for our cases. This does not involve any ontological or practical commitment that every pair of individuals can be ordered in terms of gender-based discrimination. There may well be good reasons (for example considerations from the intersections of gender with racialization, class, disability etc.) to refrain from such commitment. In future work, this linear scale should itself be captured as multi-dimensional and complex. |
| 17 | We are not making any ontological or logical claims, this is just intuitive terminology. |
| 18 | This is by far not the only fallacy in TERF reasoning, of course: Their choice of lexical meaning does misgendering harm. The belief that trans women are not suffering from patriarchy (enough/as much as cis women), or that only a small subgroup of them are, is empirically wrong [17]. (Take the gender CV bias; also, trans-feminine people tend to downplay, not over-stress their discrimination because of internalized transphobia [18].) Also, the ambivalent relation of TERFs to vagueness (rejection while building it up as a danger), i.e., tolerant acceptability, is worth thorough philosophical investigation. |
| 19 | The analog in the windows case would be asking Did you water the plants? when our actual interest is whether the flat will be flooded: It might make a ‘yes’ for the QUD more likely, but it does not imply it. |
| 20 | |
| 21 | We do not claim our suggestion is the only one that makes sense of these cases. It just also makes sense of them, since it is more powerful. The only other linguistic account that we know of for applying QUD-dependence to predicates in analogy to non-maximality—[21]—works substantially differently from ours and does not lead to the desired result for women. |
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| iff… | Tammy | Noa | Mario | Quinn | Chris | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| true | x self-identifies as a woman | ✓ | × | × | ? | × |
| strictly acceptable | x is in the same partition | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ? | × |
| with respect to the QUD as y, and y | ||||||
| self-identifies as a woman 1 | ||||||
| tolerantly acceptable | x is in the women-partition | × | × | ✓ | ✓ | × |
| with respect to some interpretation of the | ||||||
| Issue parameter but not with respect to some other | ||||||
| unacceptable | neither of the above | × | × | × | × | ✓ |
| invited? | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ? | × |
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Rosina, E.E.; Mangraviti, F. Not Strictly a Woman—QUD-Based Four-Valent Reasoning Discharges Lexical Meaning. Logics 2025, 3, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/logics3040016
Rosina EE, Mangraviti F. Not Strictly a Woman—QUD-Based Four-Valent Reasoning Discharges Lexical Meaning. Logics. 2025; 3(4):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/logics3040016
Chicago/Turabian StyleRosina, Emil Eva, and Franci Mangraviti. 2025. "Not Strictly a Woman—QUD-Based Four-Valent Reasoning Discharges Lexical Meaning" Logics 3, no. 4: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/logics3040016
APA StyleRosina, E. E., & Mangraviti, F. (2025). Not Strictly a Woman—QUD-Based Four-Valent Reasoning Discharges Lexical Meaning. Logics, 3(4), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/logics3040016

