Alan
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2009
- Messages
- 3,714
Yes.Of course, the five or six where I explained that I was making the exact opposite point I was accused of making...
Yes.Of course, the five or six where I explained that I was making the exact opposite point I was accused of making...
This diseases come from a defective genetic disorder. It is not a natural occurrence, but still come to exist. Until here is not any morality implied. Unnatural do not means immoral. Unnatural means a deviance from the ordinary course of nature. Nature gave us brains, we use it a lot, but sometimes its can become defective. Note that is not always that nature is the cause of a defect. The human being can cause the defect, rendering the event artificial. Even in such event the consequences would be an unnatural brain.
Oh boy...
As I said before, even one example of dude on dude animal action makes the notion of homosexuality natural, unless you can explain how those animals are behaving "unnaturally." Monkey original sin.
His view is so confused I can't sort it out.
First, I don't think he has a clear conception of how to distinguish "natural" from "unnatural." THat's why I tried to get him to explain this via the Christian myth of original sin. "Unnatural" acts are acts preformed by man, using free will, contrary to God's commandments. Natural, then, is acting in accordance with God's will. Unnatural is acting in sin.
That's how I've heard Christians explain it. Snake Tongue lacks even that level of perspicacity.
Second, Snake Tongue seems to have confused "natural" with "good." This would make some sense under the traditional Christian understanding of sin, but again, Snake Tongue doesn't seem to be arguing that (to the extent I can even interpret his rambling screeds).
But, of course, there's no connection between "nature" and "morality" for most of the posters here. As was said earlier, murder, theft, rape, are all rampant in the natural world. Just because a grizzly bear will murder a cub to eliminate competition, that doesn't mean human actions are bound by that evolutionary cruelty.
And then, above all of this, is the simple fact of "who give a ******" Whether natural or unnantural, genetic or tought, happy or sad, humans get to touch the genitals of any other human willing and capable of giving consent. It's a moot argument and should only hold interest in so far as it contributes to knowledge of genetics in general.
I wish have some examples of what is "unnatural".
If anyone could me provide good examples of what is "unnatural", I will gladly change my point of view to keep the debate.
Once I agree with the definitions, I will start the debate about choice.
4. lacking human qualities or sympathies; monstrous; inhuman: an obsessive and unnatural hatred.
Once they understand they true nature, they will be accepted by what they are (unnatural), not what they are trying to be (natural).
Did you like to be respected by what you are or by what you pretend to be?
Once again: I put it to you:
If you state that heterosexual sex is the only "natural" sex because it is the only way evolution can work, then I say again: You are saying that paedophile behaviour is natural so long as it's heterosexual paedophile behaviour. An older man can impregnate a girl as young as 12.
I asked for examples, not the definition.
It seems that my "poison" left you drizzled...
Could you provide an example of something "unnatural".
4. lacking human qualities or sympathies; monstrous; inhuman: an obsessive and unnatural hatred.
1 existing in or derived from nature; not made or caused by humankind:
2 in accordance with the nature of, or circumstances surrounding, someone or something
I think Snaketongue still has to answer this important point raised at him, which he ignored:
JFrankA said:Once again: I put it to you:
If you state that heterosexual sex is the only "natural" sex because it is the only way evolution can work, then I say again: You are saying that paedophile behaviour is natural so long as it's heterosexual paedophile behaviour. An older man can impregnate a girl as young as 12.
Like bonobos, other animals will mount another of the same sex and engage in seemingly "homosexual" behavior, although their motivation may differ. Dogs, for example, usually do so to express dominance. Cesar Ades, ethologist and professor of psychology at the University of S‹o Paulo, Brazil, explains, "When two males mate, what is present is a demonstration of power, not sex."[8]
I asked for examples, not the definition.
It seems that my "poison" left you drizzled...
Could you provide an example of something "unnatural".
Breeding Behaviour
Mallards form pairs only until the female lays eggs, at which time she is left by the male.
Mallards also have rates of male-male sexual activity that are unusually high for birds. In some cases, as many as 19% of pairs in a Mallard population are male-male homosexual.
When mallards pair off with mating partners, often one or several drakes will end up "left out". This group will sometimes target an isolated female duck — chasing, pestering and pecking at her until she weakens (a phenomenon referred to by researchers as rape flight), at which point each male will take turns copulating with the female. Male Mallards will also occasionally chase other males in the same way.
You wanted an example of "unnatural".
Here you go:
It's natural to chase and gang rape a woman, and after she is pregnant, to leave her alone with no support.
http://www.avianweb.com/mallard.html
rape
noun
[mass noun]
1 the crime, typically committed by a man, of forcing another person to have sexual intercourse with the offender against their will: he denied two charges of rape
[count noun] : he had committed at least two rapes archaic the abduction of a woman, especially for the purpose of having sexual intercourse with her: the Rape of the Sabine Women 2 the wanton destruction or spoiling of a place: the rape of the countryside
verb
[with object]
1 (especially of a man) force (another person) to have sexual intercourse with the offender against their will
2 spoil or destroy (a place): timber men doubt the government's ability to ensure the forests are not raped
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/rape?rskey=ZsecX5&result=1#m_en_gb0686840
When mallards pair off with mating partners, often one or several drakes will end up "left out". This group will sometimes target an isolated female duck — chasing, pestering and pecking at her until she weakens (a phenomenon referred to by researchers as rape flight), at which point each male will take turns copulating with the female. Male Mallards will also occasionally chase other males in the same way.
It's natural to chase and gang rape a woman, and after she is pregnant, to leave her alone with no support.
Why females prefer to copulate with particular males is a contentious issue. Attention is currently focused on whether females choose males on the basis of their genetic quality, in order to produce more viable offspring1. Support for this hypothesis in birds has come from studies showing that preferred males tend to father offspring of better condition or with increased survivorship2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v404/n6773/abs/404074a0.html
Christoleit (1929a,b) believed that females do not realy try to escape but rather encourage males to chase them and compete for copulations, thereby enfuring fertilization by the strongest male.
http://www.jstor.org/pss/4085762
By rearing males of both strains with wild or white females, adult females of each strain could be confronted with courting males of the own or opposite strain. As almost all females paired with males courting them most intensively, regardless the colour type of the males, it is concluded that directed male activity is a more important factor for female mate acceptance than male plumage colouration.
http://www.jstor.org/pss/4534167
This paper examines pair formation in wild and domesticated white mallard females in relation to differences in male courtship pressure. By rearing males of both strains with wild or white females, adult females of each strain could be confronted with courting males of the own or opposite strain. As almost all females paired with males courting them most intensively, regardless the colour type of the males, it is concluded that directed male activity is a more important factor for female mate acceptance than male plumage colouration.
http://www.jstor.org/pss/4534167
Investigation of courtship and pair formation of a wintering population of American black ducks (Anas rubripes) and mallards (A. platyrhynchos) near Ottawa, Ontario, indicated that initially drakes of both species exclusively courted and paired intraspecifically. After all female mallards had paired, the remaining mallard drakes joined black duck courtship groups. Of the 33 unpaired black duck females remaining at this time, only 27% formed intraspecific pairs, whereas 73% selected mallard drakes as mates, despite there being an excess of black duck drakes.
http://www.jstor.org/pss/3801431
The influence of male dominance on male-female social interactions was examined in black ducks, Anas rubripes, and mallards, A. platyrhynchos, that were raised from hatch in four different groups (male and female mallards; male and female black ducks; male mallards and female black ducks; male black ducks and female mallards). The mate preference of females, independent of the influence of male dominance, was determined by exposing females to four caged, isolated males, one from each different group. All females preferred the type of male they had been raised with since hatch.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/scienc...872a72c5abbb3bb4a3edcf74c2a464a4&searchtype=a
However, the majority of birds produce altricial young and typically form monogamous pairs that normally persist through a single breeding season. Avian polugamy or promiscutity is primarly limited to those species producing precocial young that are easly able to forage for themselves shortly after hatching, to various species that nest near relatively unlimited food supplies so that the female alone can provide for the young, and to socially parasitic species that do not have to rear they own offspring.
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1030&context=biosciornithology
It's natural to chase and gang rape a woman, and after she is pregnant, to leave her alone with no support.
...so it must be unnatural to have consensual one-on-one sex with a woman and stay with her after she gets regnant.
unnatural
adjective
1 contrary to the ordinary course of nature; abnormal
http://oxforddictionaries.com/view/entry/m_en_gb0908170#m_en_gb0908170
You are comparing human rape with animal forced copulation...
Since your meaning of natural means "everything that happens in nature", I will examine the fallacy of your interpretation:
4. lacking human qualities or sympathies; monstrous; inhuman: an obsessive and unnatural hatred.
1 existing in or derived from nature; not made or caused by humankind:
2 in accordance with the nature of, or circumstances surrounding, someone or something
4. lacking human qualities or sympathies; monstrous; inhuman: an obsessive and unnatural hatred.
such as:
1. [rape] and [forced copulation] are regularly connected (but no third, common cause is looked for).
2. Therefore [rape] is the cause of [forced copulation].
7. to plunder (a place); despoil.
8. to seize, take, or carry off by force.
De-constructing:
It's in accordance with the ordinary course of nature to Mallards males ducks chase a Mallard female duck and force copulation against it will[1], and after the Mallard female duck is pregnant, to leave her witouth resources to provide protection to the offspring[2].
When mallards pair off with mating partners, often one or several drakes will end up "left out".
Christoleit (1929a,b) believed that females do not realy try to escape but rather encourage males to chase them and compete for copulations, thereby enfuring fertilization by the strongest male.
[1] FALSE - Forced copulation against the Mallard female duck will do not correlate with the facts. Studies show that is not a frequent behaviour and are studies which advise that "rape" is not a appropriate word to be used. Mallard male ducks pair in monogamous relationships, with occasional copulation between couples. Mallard females induce the male courtship to choose the strongest, which proves that are no "rape" or "against it will" present in the copulation event.
Evidence:
[2] FALSE - Males do not exclude the Mallard Females after the copulation. This is not a natural behaviour among the Mallards social interaction. Mallard males duck generally leave the female one season after the courtship. Even when the Mallard female duck is left during the hatching, she still hold resources to protect the offspring without the direct need of the Mallard male duck.
Personally, I had Brazilian ducks species-alike in my old villa's lake and I observed that the males and females remains together until die. Beside this fact, the copulation between the males and females was quite rare, perhaps once a week. They used to look after fish and play around more than anything.
Therefore, your definition of "natural" do not relates to what is normally observed. Your lack of experience with the natural world is show in the way you confuse the behaviour of animals and humans.
I refute your definition since is not based in facts and completely ignored the natural way the Mallard ducks have been living a long time ago.
No, it is not "natural", because this is "contrary to the ordinary course of nature". Please provide, evidence of species in nature where this behaviour occurs with constant frequency and have benefited the development of the respective specie in their natural habitat.
Christoleit (1929a,b) believed that females do not realy try to escape but rather encourage males to chase them and compete for copulations, thereby enfuring fertilization by the strongest male.
I will keep in mind your definition of what is "unnatural"...
lacking human qualities or sympathies; monstrous; inhuman: an obsessive and unnatural hatred
Yeah, he never answered that.Ron_Tomkins said:I think Snaketongue still has to answer this important point raised at him, which he ignored:
JFrankA said:Once again: I put it to you:
If you state that heterosexual sex is the only "natural" sex because it is the only way evolution can work, then I say again: You are saying that paedophile behaviour is natural so long as it's heterosexual paedophile behaviour. An older man can impregnate a girl as young as 12.
Oh!!! Wait!!! I have another!!!
You have posted this piece of "evidence":
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php...&postcount=573Like bonobos, other animals will mount another of the same sex and engage in seemingly "homosexual" behavior, although their motivation may differ. Dogs, for example, usually do so to express dominance. Cesar Ades, ethologist and professor of psychology at the University of S‹o Paulo, Brazil, explains, "When two males mate, what is present is a demonstration of power, not sex."[8]
Since it's natural for one male animal to use homosexually express dominance over another male animal (in this case dogs). Then it's perfectly natural for, let's say a male superior, such as a father, who is having discipline problems with his subordinate, such as his son, to rape him.
It may seem like "homosexual" behavior, but the motivation is different. After all, "when two males mate, what is present is a demonstration of power, not sex".
So now homosexual incestuous pedophilia rape is natural.
It's not sexual attraction - it's dominance.
Would you explain how homosexual behaviour in any specie contributes to the "survival of the fittest"?
Supernatural?
You can also use your penis as a lever, but you cannot fit it inside a ear, for all you care...
I will address such questions later.
wow....snaketongue...you must really hate yourself for those male-male attractions you obviously feel.