Thread:Robert Mcneary/@comment-38953622-20191012013202/@comment-366087-20191013185249

Today they are considered as syndromes. What will future learning see them as? Consider that medical advances have moved past leeches and drilling holes in heads for the old reasons they were done (trepanning to relieve cranial pressure instead of "letting out bad spirits").

What we call a "syndrome" today may be classified as something else. Maybe these syndromes are incomplete and *functional* examples are not diagnosed because they are not having problems and "you don't fix what is not "broken".

Still, makes you wonder about when some claims to be "x gender trapped in y body"…