>>(similar to how a male doctor may be labeled 'doctor' while a female doctor may be labeled 'female doctor')
Isn't that just a bug in the English language though? English very rarely employs variations of the same word based on gender - but that's not true of many other languages. If the labeling was done in say Polish or German suddenly it wouldn't be biased at all, a male doctor would be labeled Lekarz/Artz while a female one would be labeled Lekarka/Ärztin - it's just what it is, no bias here.
Isn't that just a bug in the English language though? English very rarely employs variations of the same word based on gender - but that's not true of many other languages. If the labeling was done in say Polish or German suddenly it wouldn't be biased at all, a male doctor would be labeled Lekarz/Artz while a female one would be labeled Lekarka/Ärztin - it's just what it is, no bias here.