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| quote: | Originally posted by occrider
Ok, good argument. Let's speak in absolute terms however. Is our innate sexuality something that we grow into or is it something that we are born with? |
I was actually debating this in a different forum about a week ago, and I found a good study that suggests that hormonal levels in the mother during pregnancy effect sexual orientation. (Now I can't find my old post or the citation I used, dammit. ) I have never found any evidence suggesting that it is genetic, but that does not mean it is not biological. Hormonal levels effect the way the brain develops in the womb, which, in turn, may alter sexual orientation. Of course, there is lukewarm support for this study, but there is no really conclusive evidence out there to begin with.
| quote: | | For example, let's say that my upbringing has resulted in me being homosexual. Will I feel any innate instinctual urge to be attracted to females? |
Probably not. Aside from that first study, there are a handful of other ones that suggest late birth order is correlated with homosexuality. There is only speculation as to why this happens, but apparently it is biological, since birth order occurs before any "nurture" can take place.
| quote: | | Let's say you raise a child from birth under the disposition that homosexuality is the norm. He is culturally taught that the male body is something to admired and that societal acceptance is based upon homosexual relations. However, if that male still instinctually lusts for females isn't that an indication that sexuality is ultimately determined through genetics? |
It would be. This is what homosexuals are taught, only with the opposite sex. Males are taught to admire the female body (I don't know a homosexual who was actually encouraged to be gay). But there are many ways of attributing deviance from the norm that are not genetic/biological. I think sexual orientation has alot to do with self-perception, as well, and that is completely learned. Certain events can have different effects on people with different biological makeup. If one is biologically predisposed (lets say through hormonal imbalances in the womb) towards the homosexual side, then the abscence of a father figure in life might
tip the balance, and he could easily become homosexual. Without this biological predisposition, though, abscence of a father will almost never lead to homosexuality.
It also may be interesting to note that neither sex nor sexual orientation are black and white things. There can be, and there is "in betweens." There are cases of genetic females being born with male genitalia, and vice versa. While genes have something to do with biological aspects of sex, so do hormones. Hormones stimulate (or retard) growth of certain areas of the brain and genitalia. If this hormonal imbalance occurs early enough, it can change the entire sex phenotype of the fetus. If it occurs later, it can change just the sexual orientation of the brain, as the brain develops later. Of course in life, tendencies can either be encouraged or repressed by parents, peers, and society.
In conclusion, though, it is a very complex matter. It is not simply a "choice" as some asshole put it on another forum. Nor is it simply a difference in genotype. Genotype is good at predicting simple biological matters like eye color, etc., but when it comes to complex things like sexual orientation, which is heavily controlled by hormones, social learning, etc., it starts to break down. Sexual orientation is not just a switch that can be flipped on and off in the brain. It is more like a multi-dimentional crossfader, with a bunch of other volume and gain knobs in the same circuit.
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Tracks that fuel my dreams:
CM - Dream Universe (Marino's Space Mix)
Illuminatus - Hope (Oliver Lieb Remix)
Virtualmismo - Last Train to Universe
Stefano Libelle - Ascension
Magica - Magica (Ibiza Remixx)
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