HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
So the people who want to believe it is genetic have the opposite agenda, of proving that it is not a choice and they can't be held accountable. That is pretty obvious. The problem is that both sides, as in this thread, are arguing for what they want the truth to be, rather than trying to determine what the truth is - that is why I objected to the moral arguments as obscuring the fact argument. Homosexuality doesn't become genetic, or not, because that's what you want, so the morality arguments are pointless without any fact basis.
In this thread, both sides seem to be arguing from the basis that they assume the fact that it is/isn't genetic and "here are the moral implications of that." You seem to have skipped the hard step, even though the thread seemed to start with the nature v. nurture argument.
So any thought on the idea that the “homosexuality is genetic” crowd is advancing a point of view about biological determination of fairly specific behavior that has implications for racism and similar "all people are not created equal" arguments?
BS. Wanting to believe has nothing to do with it.
There are actual MRI studies that shows that at least certain pathways (which are currently easy to identify and trigger for such a study) in the brain of homosexual men and homosexual women that are wired like for the opposite gender.
Now it's hard to say if it's genetic or hormonal imbalances in the womb or what. But it _is_ pathways that -- for whatever reason that wiring might happen -- are already formed when you pop out of the womb, and are not known to rewire after that in any known circumstances. Much less as a matter of "choice". Generally you'll find that you don't have a choice to rewire the connections between your brain's lobes.
(If nothing else, all those anti-gay preachers who got caught with male prostitutes, would have chosen to rewire themselves to straight if it were that simple.)
But at any rate, it has nothing to do with wanting to believe, but with evidence.
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