We investigate why the remarkable diversity of human identity, including gender fluidity, non-binary roles, and varied sexual orientations, is fundamentally rooted in the evolutionary and neurocognitive complexity of the human brain. Drawing upon interdisciplinary evidence from comparative biology, neuroimaging, anthropology, and social neuroscience, this paper explores how increased neural complexity across evolutionary trajectories supports behavioral plasticity and identity diversification. The concept of neural degeneracy, wherein different neural structures produce functionally similar outcomes, is central to understanding how individual and cultural diversity naturally emerges from the brain’s highly adaptable networks. By reviewing historical, prehistoric, and cross-species data, the paper demonstrates that identity diversity is neither recent nor culturally limited but has longstanding evolutionary and social foundations. Despite substantial scientific consensus on this inherent complexity, societal resistance persists, often driven by oversimplified and biologically reductionist interpretations of neuroscience. To counter these misunderstandings, the article introduces Complexity Neuroethics, a framework advocating the acknowledgment of diversity of identity expressions as an evolutionarily expected outcome of neurocognitive evolution. Ultimately, the review calls for a transformative dialogue between neuroscience and society, promoting policies, healthcare practices, and educational initiatives aligned with neuroscientific realities to foster more inclusive societies that embrace self-identity as an evolutionary and cognitive achievement.
Sex and Gender Identities Are Emergent Properties of Neural Complexity
Di Plinio, Simone
Primo
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2025-01-01
Abstract
We investigate why the remarkable diversity of human identity, including gender fluidity, non-binary roles, and varied sexual orientations, is fundamentally rooted in the evolutionary and neurocognitive complexity of the human brain. Drawing upon interdisciplinary evidence from comparative biology, neuroimaging, anthropology, and social neuroscience, this paper explores how increased neural complexity across evolutionary trajectories supports behavioral plasticity and identity diversification. The concept of neural degeneracy, wherein different neural structures produce functionally similar outcomes, is central to understanding how individual and cultural diversity naturally emerges from the brain’s highly adaptable networks. By reviewing historical, prehistoric, and cross-species data, the paper demonstrates that identity diversity is neither recent nor culturally limited but has longstanding evolutionary and social foundations. Despite substantial scientific consensus on this inherent complexity, societal resistance persists, often driven by oversimplified and biologically reductionist interpretations of neuroscience. To counter these misunderstandings, the article introduces Complexity Neuroethics, a framework advocating the acknowledgment of diversity of identity expressions as an evolutionarily expected outcome of neurocognitive evolution. Ultimately, the review calls for a transformative dialogue between neuroscience and society, promoting policies, healthcare practices, and educational initiatives aligned with neuroscientific realities to foster more inclusive societies that embrace self-identity as an evolutionary and cognitive achievement.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


