Growing number of academic journals “ignore science entirely in favor of philosophy,” nurse responds.
One of its Ph.D. programs at Yale University. Candidates for D.S. are criticized for an essay that claims transgender people should be included in childbirth.
According to Carlo Sariego, the writer, pregnancy shouldn’t “be defined by natural phenomena.” Instead,” a type of social, aesthetic, and emotional experience and expectation” should be the definition of pregnancy.
According to a profile page on the Yale site, Sariego is a doctoral candidate for anthropology and girls, sex, and sexuality research at the Ivy League university. The student learner uses the pronoun” they/them” instead.
At the end of April, Sariego’s content,” Transfeminist pregnancy: reproductive speculation, music, and desire,” was published in Sage Journals.
We need a more comprehensive conception of conception, which is fed by the capable cultural world of birth and reproduction, to promote life. Such a description of maternity supports the feminist movement’s desire to reduce the role of women in sexual life, the Yale student wrote.
Colin Wright, a brother scholar and fellow at the Manhattan Institute, was the first to post a papers online. He began his severe criticism by stating that even the second word is a “flat lie.”
According to the paper’s second word, the claim that a “woman” was defined as “any person with a uterus, regardless of gender identity, is nonsense.
In fact, it defines “woman” as” an individual whose biological sexual is female” and provides further information. photograph. twitter.com/hImadReZHf
— Colin Wright ( @SwipeWright ) May 13, 2025
According to Sariego, trans people who” change” experience similar experience as pregnant women.
Both involve a usurpation of hormones, dramatic body changes, and a fresh self, the Yale student wrote.
Wright made the following observation:
As proof, [Sariego ] provides a case study of a man who identified as a woman who had to turn off estrogen in order to produce enough sperm to store in a sperm bank.
He says,” I’m pregnant,” because this process involved a hormonal shift, wearing baggy clothes (underwear ), and taking vitamins, and pregnant women also go through hormonal shifts, wearing baggy clothes (underwear ), and taking vitamins.
The author states that” to become infertile as a trans woman is to do these daily tasks that help her produce the required sperm.”
Okay, you probably didn’t think items couldn’t get any more crazy. However, you would be seriously mistaken.
A young child named Gan is living in an alien town that is “run by insect-like… pic,” according to the final explanation for why people may become pregnant. twitter.com/M0ttwtvF9l
— Colin Wright ( @SwipeWright ) May 13, 2025
In contrast, Jennifer Lahl, the leader of the Center for Bioethics and Culture, criticised Yale, one of the most prominent universities in the world, for allowing “fringe” ideas to go as award.
I work in biological systems, and I have read a lot of studies on childbirth and fertility. The majority of it is easy and medical. However, I’ve been seeing more and more articles lately that completely disregard science in favor of philosophy, Lahl wrote in a column for Reality’s Last Stand.
If such considering continues to be unchallenged, a nurse expressed concern for the future of medicine.
Although it may seem strange, and it is, this kind of wondering is becoming more prevalent in scientific circles. And because these concepts are beginning to affect medical and plan in the real world, they must be challenged and taken seriously, she wrote.
Sariego did not respond to a question sent by The College Fix in an internet regarding the condemnation.
Sariego is” a grain actor and figurine maker,” according to the Yale website bio, in addition to grad school. One of the puppets ‘ pictures was posted on Sariego’s private site, but it seems to have been removed since The Fix visited it last week.
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A controversial article about conception was published in Sage Journals by Yale University grad student Carlo Sariego. Carlo Sariego, Sage Journals, and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
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