In the summer of 2022, a downright absurd dispute broke out at Humboldt University in Berlin. The university had disinvited a biologist doing her doctorate because, among other things, she wanted to lecture on the fact that there are exactly two sexes in humans. In forums, emotions ran high, nerves were on edge and it was suggested that this statement was controversial. Of course it is not.

Every human being (supposedly with the exception of Jesus Christ) has exactly two biological parents. Not three, not four, but not just one parent either. So far, everything is clear. Nevertheless, some people argue that there are more than two biological sexes. How do they arrive at this?

Biologically, there are different ways to distinguish and define gender. Genotypically (chromosomes, SRY gene), phenotypically (sexual characteristics, potential production of sperm or eggs) or also via gender identity. There are exceptions to most of these definitions, but they do not call into question the principle of bisexuality, which is simply necessary for reproduction. Without two biological parents of different sexes, there is no offspring - and this is how gender can also be clearly defined.