You are missing my point.
Am I? Are you sure that it's not that I simply disagree with you?
I recounted the wonderfully funny, crazy, great and ever so true story about the neurosurgeons and their frontal lobe resection remedy for the antisocial, as a more or less "so what?"
It's not a bad story at all. It's also of only limited relevance to the issues at hand. To keep things on topic, I only dealt with the part of it that dealt directly with the discussion at hand.
My claim here is that you are making a "category" error. Sexual preference is not about the corporeal, at least the CHOICE part is not. Getting it on may be about bodies. But we all know we can be in love with the guy or gal who could not care less how we feel, and so we never get that first kiss anyway.
It's actually fine with me if you believe that there are non-physical aspects to things, so long as you aren't trying to claim that the physical components are either meaningless or insufficient to explain the observed, or in this case, felt, result. And yes, it's more than just neurons, when dealing with emotions. One should not forget the influence of hormones, for example. How we feel and understand the effects, though, requires them.
That said, your use of the word "CHOICE" suggests an old dispute. One that I may as well address momentarily. The only choice that I've ever consciously felt that I had was whether to accept my feelings or refuse to accept them. Given the associated psychological issues with refusal, I chose to accept them. I didn't choose who I liked, just what to do with it.
My point was, is, and forever shall be Aridas, that this is something not in need of explanation. Love simply is, including sexual love, whether acted on or not, whether imagined or "real".
I don't think much of arguments for ignorance.
Aridas, it is as though you wanted to know not a physical law for gravity, but were rather asking why there was gravity to begin with. You are asking science to do something she cannot do.
Your question Aridas, is not a question for science. It lies outside of her ken. Philosophers may legitimately ask the question, "why there is gravity". As such, as a philosophical question, it is indeed legitimate, though their answer, whatever it may be, will not be an answer that will satisfy you. You my friend, will, to your credit, never be satisfied.
I disagree. Science has its limits, certainly. This is highly unlikely to be beyond them. That said, it is highly unlikely to be as simple an answer as "a single gay gene," much as many would hope otherwise.
Objects fall to the ground, though they understand not why they fall. They simply do.
I fail to see much point in pointing out that capacity for understanding in inanimate objects is, to all observable evidence, nonexistent, occasional decisions to talk to them as if they were notwithstanding.
They simply fall, when they find themselves in the influence of a gravitational field. We can describe the field, its dimensions, how it works in terms of "numbers", gravity's figure, ∇νGμν =0, Gμν ≡Rμν −1gμνR=Gνμ. Even this though, the famous "Einstein Tensor", is most appropriately termed a mathematical identity and not a "law of physics" per se.
So... you're arguing that things can be understood, while trying to say that we can't understand why things happen? Of course, in gravity's case, I could simply direct you to
this, as an example of an explanation for the direct why, mixed in with a number of other related things. I'd suggest starting at about 4:20 for the specifics.
You are beautiful Aridas,
Thank you. I don't see how that's all that relevant to this, though.
so wanting, ACHING no less, aching to not only understand the Einstein Tensor, but also, what it is about the world to begin with that makes it so.
See linked video. Also, no. Your guess is incorrect. "ACHING" and the rhetoric makes it sound like you're trying to please a crowd of those who want to be reaffirmed in their faith, rather than actually addressing the issues at hand.
You want to know who gravity's mommy and daddy were.
When there's no solid logical or evidential reason to believe that gravity had a mommy and daddy, no, it's not something that I concern myself with.
How, why , when where and for what reason it was born.
To make this short, I'll just mimic another poster. "Assumes facts not in evidence."
Assumes facts not in evidence.
You want access to realm that is and shall remain forever closed to your queries Aridas. Bang on that door all you like, no one will open that door.
Factually, your attempts to tell me what I want are distinctly left wanting. I'll mildly applaud you for your attempt at eloquence, though.
Oh MY! Aridas, you are splendid.
I'll just say thank you, again, and choose to take the "high road."
I say to myself sometimes that it is as though we listen to the words of Gods as those words leak through the cracks in a wall.
Always a funny quote coming from someone who thought that proclaiming one self an atheist, repeatedly, mattered, with regards to the points that they were being a proponent for. That said, good for you for being able to formulate that. Conceptually, however, it feels like nonsense, to me.
But the long and short of it all, the ever loving free fall of it all, shall find you Aridas, wandering through space-time from now until.........kingdom ain't ever gonna' come. You may come to terms with the numbers, but from whence the numbers come.........???????
I'm afraid that whatever the point of your first sentence was, I'm forced to classify it as rhetorical gibberish. As for the second... the numbers would be meaningless, in the first place, if they didn't have application. "From whence the numbers come," frankly, is a bit meaningless, too, once one understands that the numbers that you seem to be referring to are simply a way to express verifiable and predictable observations.
I play the piano, the banjo, and you want to know what music is to begin with. We are different.
We are different, yes. Somehow, I don't think that your comparison is any more correct than your previous attempts to tell me what I want, though.
Bertrand Russell became so very excited when as a young man he thought he had indeed discovered from whence the numbers, the numbers themselves, quite literally had come. He thought he had discovered their mommy and daddy. The HOW, WHY, WHERE, WHEN, FUNDAMENTALS OF NUMBERS. Then he stumbled upon a paradox that upset his apple cart. He also learned someone had beaten him to the punch, not to the paradox part. Russell would surprise that person with some very very very bad news, the news that nobody knew who number one's mommy was after all. Russell learned Gottlob Frege was up to the same "where oh whereing" that Russell himself and you Aridas were and are up to. Russell wrote to the ol' boy, Frege, and told him that his book and theories about the "Foundations of Arithmetic" was about to take a massively damaging and perhaps fatal hit.
Nice start to your story. Your assumptions are past the point of amusing, though, and to the point of an eyeroll.
It turned out, no one did know what "numbers were" after all.
Other than a group of various and related concepts that are remarkably useful in many ways?
Russell wrote a long long book with Whitehead taking the troubling paradox into consideration, but even then, Godel came up with an "incompleteness theorem" that ended Russell's however brief flirtation with understanding numbers at their most fundamental level. Alan Turing's work similarly showed Russell "wrong", if such a great man could ever really be "wrong".
The "greatness" of a man has absolutely no bearing on whether they can be wrong. Hence one of the reasons why 'argument from authority' is considered a fallacy.
It is off topic, but Russell was ever so ever so ever so massively humongously fabulous, was he not???
I have never called anyone or anything "massively humongously fabulous," and don't feel like starting now.
So Aridas, you know my good friend, love is ever so much more complex than say, "gravity" , or 1, 2, 3.........., and if we do not understand those trivial things, how ever do you suppose we can come to be intimate with intimacy? It is so beyond the feeble reach of boys and girls. It seems hardly worth struggling with, though you my friend I see will continue to struggle. To your credit I must say, and I do say that with absolute sincerity.
Again, arguments for ignorance are not particularly persuasive. Especially when your argument is based on false analogy. That gravity's effects can be expressed in mathematics and used to reliably predict a result, by your own admission, alone, shatters your argument.
So while you seek to understand why there is water,
*eyeroll*
it is my day off today and I shall go to the pool right now and simply swim in it.
If you actually did go swimming, I hope you enjoyed yourself, greatly.
It's not at all easily defined - that's the point.
Either sexual attraction to males, females, or both, whether acted on/admitted or not, or non-forced sexual actions with males, females, or both.
The former is the more useful for most uses. The latter, more useful for uses specifically involving behavior. Yes, I am aware that I'm excluding hermaphrodites.
That said, I'd say that that's a pretty easy definition of the specific matter in question.
That, again, is precisely the point.
To be half-deliberately obtuse, your point is that your point fails, badly?
Which? Christianity? That it's only arisen once seems like a pretty good indication. Homosexuality? Heh. I'm going to have to ask if you're serious, now.
And if that is true, why is it that the category "homosexual" didn't even exist as a concept until quite recently?
I'm just going to facepalm, a little, at this, and toss the onus back at you. Which version of the 'category "homosexual"' are you talking about? And are you claiming that same gender attractions didn't occur until quite recently?