To begin with I need to state clearly two things. One, my point in all of this is to make it clear that the causes for homosexuality cannot be only nature, or in fact only nurture. It must be both until enough evidence is given to one side that would totally discredit the other.
Second, I am responding first to naotmaa, then to wiccanchild.
The issue with these theories are that it can be proven that none of the above has affected a gay person. So that would bring back the question as to why they are gay if this has never happened to them. Also, absent parents, sexual abuse, distant parent, etc. can occur to straight people as well. So that would bring up the question why do these events have such an effect that it will make some people gay and others not?
again, the issue with this [exotic becomes erotic] is that not all gay people have felt this way.
No one claimed that it happens to all gay people. Moot point. The point is that it does happen for many gays.
No its not. LeVay, in his quote, is saying that people should not jump to conclusions that this is proof that people are born gay. Obviously he has not proven that but he has found evidence that would point it to being possibly biological. It supports the theory that it could be genetic. It's evidence.
Again, it's not theory until it has more evidence to it- one simple study on a part of the brain isn't going to cut it until you know how it got to being that way in some but not that way in others.
Since the hypothalmus regulates hormones and such, the enlargment could be
because of homosexuality rather than the cause of it. The findings put forth in the study were inconclusive because there was not enough detail to it.
Why would putting advertisements in gay magazine make this study useless?
Put simply, it shows bias. It means that the selection wasn't random because some homosexuals would jump at the opportunity to prove that they're born with what they have. It means that the survey isn't as reliable because it was selective in where it put its advertisements- if it called random twins, simply asking them questions, you would get better and more accurate results.
Where did you find this study?
The study was done in Australia, and the intent of the study was to check Bailey and Pillard's findings. I found it quoted in Jones and Yarhouse.
I'm afraid Jones and Yarhouse might be somewhat biased in their evidence.
They do point out in their book that are doing research "through the eyes of faith" and with the idea that homosexuality is immoral.
Every single study that I used from that source they quoted from another source directly- quotation marks included. How direct quotes could be biased is beyond me unless they'd risk lying to the public and being shot down beyond all belief.
This, however, does not disprove the inborn theory. also, their was a study done by William Reiner about gender identity. In developing nations it used to be common practise to castrate boy with small penises and have them raised as girls. Despite this, the majority of these boys as adults, said they were attracted to women and began living their lives as males.
That is a moot point unless in raising them as girls they isolated them from other male children and other male influences. What's been found is that a positive or negative same-sex influence has an effect on gender identity- that's the point of all these statistics. Mainly the one you didn't comment on:
In another related study done by J. H. Brown, no cases in forty were found where the homosexual male had an affection relationship to their father (Thompson, 115).
It should be taken into consideration that straight men are more likely to be somewhat uncomfortable about the idea of having a gay male friend.
It should be taken into consideration that the friendship thing was
as they were kids, not adults in the particular study that comment was made on.
Now, on to wiccanchild.
Citing and then criticising flawed studies is a pointless exercise. Critically analyse sources that people have cited themselves.
When I did my research for the paper I wrote, and posted bits of here, I did not look at the things surrounding the studies in the boks, I looked only at the sources. What do you think I was doing the whole time? Finding stuff to complain about? I wrote that paper a year ago, unsure of what my results would be when I started the paper. If you don't call that critical analysis, I can't help you. I tried my best to be objective. You seem convinced that I started off without a doubt in my mind what I would find.
How? If almost half of all men hate their fathers, and almost all men felt estranged from them, then why are only 2-5% of men gay? It seems that the exotic is not erotic.
I like how you took that out of context with the rest of it. Read:
In a questionnaire given in 1994 to 114 men, the following statistics were found.
86 percent indicated little or no time spent with their fathers during childhood. 63 percent said their fathers were not considerate of their needs.50 percent believed their fathers did not love them. 45 percent reported that their fathers belittled or humiliated them. 44 percent felt their fathers were disinterested and detached. 39 percent said they hated their fathers (Thompson, 114).
This questionnaire certainly gives credence to two theories: psychoanalytic and exotic becomes erotic. In another related study done by J. H. Brown, no cases in forty were found where the homosexual male had an affection relationship to their father (Thompson, 115).
The questionare questioned homosexuals, not simply men. I was on a page limit when I wrote this paper and I went over, so I had to cut some things- so I wrote that part in such a way that it would be clear that both studies were studying homosexuals, but not saying it each time for each study. Your point is moot.
Non sequitur. If all most all gay men had their first sexual encounter with (and attraction to) men, then surely this points to a biological cause? Or rather, how is a biological cause less likey than a psychological one?
I like how you completely ignored the first part- about childhood friends, or just in general the part about childhood. Because that has everything to do with it. All of the things you quoted for your reply had to do with the childhood of the homosexuals in the study. In other words, their first sexual encounter was not with
men but with other
boys. This clearly demonstrates the sexual experience theory.
For the same reason that the blue eye colour, while inborn, is not the only eye colour.
Now please get back to the point.
Okay. I'll state it again. There is no way you can correctly state without further evidence and knowledge of how homosexuality started in humans that homosexuality is natural. Stating that there's evidence to suggest it might be biological doesn't cut it. It's not cut and dried yet- there's evidence for both nature and nurture being the cause, and I'd venture to say that it's both nature and nurture, not one or the other- just like anything else within psychology. Why am I being so persistent about this you might ask? Because I would hate for the readers and debaters on this thread to get an inaccurate representation of the way things are.