First-person authority over gender: metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic but non-absolute
First-person authority over gender: metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic but non-absolute
Suppose I say: “I am a woman.” Many people agree that, in almost all cases, it would be wrong in some way to challenge this claim. I have some kind of first-person authority over my gender. Being able to recognize this first-person authority is a key desideratum for accounts of how gender claims function in trans-inclusive contexts. However, there is disagreement about exactly what kind of first-person authority needs to be recognized. Bettcher argues that we should recognize ethical rather than epistemic first-person authority over gender. Critics argue that ethical first-person authority, as generally understood, is not enough. I argue that Bettcher’s influential account of gender claims as acts of existential self-identification has the resources to recognize non-absolute metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic first-person authority over gender. Moreover, I argue, this kind of non-absolute metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic first-person authority is exactly what we should want an account of gender practices to recognize. It gives plausible results about tricky cases and enables us to clearly identify the ways in which someone is wronged when their gender claim is wrongfully challenged. I identify the features of the Bettcher’s account which enable it to recognize this first-person authority and use Bex-Priestley’s account as a model to show that we can identify these features in other promising accounts. I finish by discussing the implications of Bettcher’s recent monograph, in which Bettcher revises and reformulates her earlier arguments, situating them within an account of interpersonal spatiality.
metaphysics of gender, first person authority over gender, epistemic first-person authority, ethical first-person authority, metaphysical first-person authority, existential self-identification
Woollard, Fiona
c3caccc2-68c9-47c8-b2d3-9735d09f1679
Woollard, Fiona
c3caccc2-68c9-47c8-b2d3-9735d09f1679
Woollard, Fiona
(2025)
First-person authority over gender: metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic but non-absolute.
Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy.
(In Press)
Abstract
Suppose I say: “I am a woman.” Many people agree that, in almost all cases, it would be wrong in some way to challenge this claim. I have some kind of first-person authority over my gender. Being able to recognize this first-person authority is a key desideratum for accounts of how gender claims function in trans-inclusive contexts. However, there is disagreement about exactly what kind of first-person authority needs to be recognized. Bettcher argues that we should recognize ethical rather than epistemic first-person authority over gender. Critics argue that ethical first-person authority, as generally understood, is not enough. I argue that Bettcher’s influential account of gender claims as acts of existential self-identification has the resources to recognize non-absolute metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic first-person authority over gender. Moreover, I argue, this kind of non-absolute metaphysical, ethical, and epistemic first-person authority is exactly what we should want an account of gender practices to recognize. It gives plausible results about tricky cases and enables us to clearly identify the ways in which someone is wronged when their gender claim is wrongfully challenged. I identify the features of the Bettcher’s account which enable it to recognize this first-person authority and use Bex-Priestley’s account as a model to show that we can identify these features in other promising accounts. I finish by discussing the implications of Bettcher’s recent monograph, in which Bettcher revises and reformulates her earlier arguments, situating them within an account of interpersonal spatiality.
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FPA over gender JESP Author Accepted
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 December 2025
Keywords:
metaphysics of gender, first person authority over gender, epistemic first-person authority, ethical first-person authority, metaphysical first-person authority, existential self-identification
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Local EPrints ID: 508515
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508515
ISSN: 1559-3061
PURE UUID: bb87f011-1309-486d-b8d1-282e5b1d2555
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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2026 17:36
Last modified: 27 Jan 2026 02:57
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