Most people operate under an intuitive, unitary view of the human experience. This perspective suggests that you are your body, and your consciousness—your very sense of self—is a direct byproduct of your biological makeup. In this framework, the brain serves as a biological organ that generates the will. When hormones change or physical conditions shift, the mind responds in kind. This empirical understanding views the self as deeply rooted in a physical reality that can be observed, touched, and measured. It assumes that our thoughts are part of a larger, integrated organism governed by natural laws.
The Sovereignty of the Will
A starkly different philosophical model has emerged within the intersectional left
. This perspective elevates human consciousness to a state of supreme sovereignty, effectively decoupling it from the physical form. Here, the internal will is not a product of biology but a transcendental force that defines reality itself. Under this worldview, if a person wills an identity, that internal declaration takes precedence over any external, biological observation. The body is often viewed not as the source of the self, but as a constraint or even a barrier to the true expression of the inner soul.
Empirical Observation vs. Idealistic Fancy
This tension represents a major schism between empiricism
traditions and continental philosophy
. The English-speaking world has long favored an objective approach to reality, where categories like sex are determined by observable biological facts. However, the shift toward idealism treats the internal "good will" as something that must be true across all times and places, independent of physical contingency. This creates a disconnect where objective reality and subjective will collide, leading to profound cultural friction. Understanding this as a clash of fundamental metaphysics, rather than just a political disagreement, allows for a deeper insight into the current social landscape.