VG,
But the point here is why they believe in such things: stick children in religious schools, and you’ll get religious adults (moreover, religious adults who subscribe to whichever denomination the school happens to be: kids put in madrassas become muslims; kids put in christian schools become christians. For that matter Amazonian tribespeople whose kids are brought up in their traditions become whatever their culture teaches them. These days with more multi-cultural societies you do see more crossover than there used to be (and more escapees too), but there’s no mystery about this).
Conversely, leave kids to develop their critical faculties and then to decide for themselves (as we do with, say, politics) and relatively few will become religious from a standing start after age 18.
No, talking about schools and particular religious practices might be a point that you want to make but that is irrelevant to the point that I was discussing - that some people have always been attracted to a belief that there is something more out there, a non-material agent, the supernatural. My discussion was not about any specific religion but about whether we can choose beliefs. A belief in something more has been happening long before the existence of mass education. If you want to discuss the link between religious schools and particular religions you'll have to find someone else to discuss it with, as from my perspective, you and I have discussed and disagreed many times on this topic so I have no interest in a repeat performance.
Bit rich given your reliance on only assertion so far, but ok. Here you go:
Not sure I follow - what assertion are you referring to? I expressed opinions and asked questions and spoke about what has been argued on other threads about beliefs but if something came across as an assertion feel free to point it out and I'll either modify it or clarify my meaning or provide some supporting evidence, depending on what it was.
“The prevalence of women’s and men’s heterosexuality, bisexuality, and homosexuality was assessed in 28 nations using data from 191,088 participants from a 2005 BBC Internet survey. Sexual orientation was measured in terms of both self-reported sexual identity and self-reported degree of same-sex attraction. Multilevel modeling analyses revealed that nations’ degrees of gender equality, economic development, and individualism were not significantly associated with men’s or women’s sexual orientation rates across nations. These models controlled for individual-level covariates including age and education level, and nation-level covariates including religion and national sex ratios. Robustness checks included inspecting the confidence intervals for meaningful associations, and further analyses using complete-cases and summary scores of the national indices. These analyses produced the same non-significant results. The relatively stable rates of heterosexuality, bisexuality, and homosexuality observed across nations for both women and men suggest that non-social factors likely may underlie much variation in human sexual orientation. These results do not support frequently offered hypotheses that sexual orientation differences are related to gendered social norms across societies.”
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10508-019-01590-0
Thanks for your link. I read it. It's very interesting though not based on a random sample of people so not representative enough to rule out other factors.
It seems to be the views of BBC service-users in different countries who had an interest in the topic enough to volunteer to participate and report on whether they have felt any same sex attraction and what label they would attach to their sexual orientation from a choice of heterosexual, bi-sexual or homosexual, including whether they would label themselves heterosexual despite reporting having felt a same-sex attraction. So it's a study on how people who are comfortable with the BBC's culture (enough to access their survey) would rate the level of opposite sex and same sex-attraction they have ever felt (“1—not at all” to “7—very”) and which label they would pick to describe their sexual orientation from a choice of 3.
The survey found that among their volunteers there was a higher rate of men who identified as homosexual compared to women, in all the nations where volunteers completed the survey. And then it spoke about the limitations of the study e.g. cultural factors to do with self-identification, the use of only English as the language in the survey so the language of other cultures might not correspond to the English word, and that the samples used were not random or necessarily representative of national patterns overall.
And the discussion ends with "Future empirical studies are needed to better test the extent to which national gender norms and economic factors are related to variations in the expression of sexual orientation across nations." So look forward to reading the explanations that those future studies put forward.
But the point here remains the observable behaviour itself (across species) not how you happen to label it.
And my point remains that babies are not developed enough to report same-sex attraction so we have to wait until they develop sufficiently to exhibit or report it, unless you have a study we can read about the biological markers for same-sex attraction being observed in babies?
Whoosh. People will engage sexually with whichever gender they feel the urge to feel attracted to. That’s it. You don’t need to have “matured enough” mentally – either you feel a certain way when your hormones kick in or you don’t. You know this already though – people with severe developmental issues can also have sexual urges of various types even though they'd be considered mentally very immature.
No sure what the whoosh means, given you just agreed with my point - when the hormones kick in and people exhibit or report same sex attraction is a development point that does not occur in babies.
Again, you were the one making he unqualified assertions, and again – nonetheless, here you go (there are thousands of papers on this online by the way – this is just one of the first that I found):
“Research on the causes of human sexual orientation has been marshaled in support of predetermined and opposing theological viewpoints. Whilst acknowledging that there is still much that is not known, the peer reviewed scientific literature clearly shows that a combination of genetic and environmental factors contribute to sexual orientation, with approximately one third of variance currently attributed to the former. Much of the known environmental influence appears to be intra-uterine and there is no currently convincing evidence that social environment plays a significant part...”
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13558358.2020.1818541
See above. Ain’t facts a bitch sometime eh?
Again - what exactly are you referring to when you say "unqualified assertions". I have not formed a view on this and was after information. Why would facts be a bitch - you're not making any sense?
Your link is very interesting and I look forward to further research that can provide more certainty. Your link indicates that men and women experience attraction differently - men experience more category-specific attraction - they are attracted to a particular sex - whereas women's "experiences of sexual attraction are more malleable and context dependent than men’s" and women are more likely to demonstrate sexual fluidity. On the subject of genetics your link says "these analyses suggest that, overall, sexual orientation in homosexual people is 32% due to genetic factors, 25% due to family environment, and 43% due to specific environment. These figures represent a modest, but not insignificant, genetic contribution to sexual orientation.....the processes that lead to bodily anatomical and physiological sexual characteristics must clearly be distinguished from those that act upon the brain to influence experiences of sexual attraction and associated sexual behavior. It is therefore entirely possible, at least in principle, that differences in adult sexual orientation are the result of exposure of particular brain regions to atypical hormone levels during a crucial period of development.....Is it possible, then, that variant levels of androgens acting differentially upon sexual organ development and certain brain regions during crucial periods of development might sometimes result in adult males who experience androphilia, or adult females who experience gynephilia? Evidence from animal studies, and from clinical studies of humans, suggests that this indeed might be possible."
Your link says that putting aside differing interpretations of the evidence, "it is also important to recognize that the scientific perspective still understands “nurture” as a part of the natural order. Distinctions between “nature and nurture” are easily misunderstood as a contrast between what is “natural” and what human agency imposes. Influences of nurture – family upbringing, wider society, life events of various kinds – are still part of the natural order. Human life in this world cannot be conceived of without them. They may be judged adverse or beneficial to human flourishing, and they may be more or less amenable to intentional manipulation, but they are still a part of the whole system of causation that science takes into account when studying sexual orientation or, indeed, most other human traits and characteristics, as well as many physical and mental disorders. Even if “nurture” were found to be more important in the causation of sexual orientation, it would therefore still only be one part of the whole natural system of interacting variables that go to make people who and what they are. In any case, the present weight of evidence is strongly in favor of non-social, rather than social, causes of sexual orientation."
On the effect of hormones during in-uterine development, your link says "There is some evidence that these irreversible, or “organisational”, influences might include changes in the brain which determine adult sexual orientation. Whilst this evidence is subject to significant limitations, notably due to the impossibility of ethically conducting the appropriate scientific experiments on human beings, it derives from a variety of sources and, taken together, provides a body of support which cannot currently be completely dismissed."
Oh for sure many societies (especially religious ones) seek to regulate private sexual behaviours. You missed the point though: regardless of how you choose to label these behaviours, they happen. Various species contain sub-groups of same sex partners that observably pair bond, engage in sexual activity etc. Call that gay, straight of pineapple-flavoured for all I care, the point remains the behaviour itself, not what you call it.
What point am I missing, given your statement that "they happen" is agreeing with my statement that people feel attractions and desires for lots of different things?
Wrong again. As so far the biggest causes of homosexuality are believed to be genetic (about a third) and intra-uterine environmental (about two thirds) with no significant later cultural difference at all (see above) that’s all there already in latent form by the time the baby is born. So are the genetic markers for eye colour, which is why it's analogous.
Did you read the part in your link which said "these analyses suggest that, overall, sexual orientation in homosexual people is 32% due to genetic factors, 25% due to family environment, and 43% due to specific environment. These figures represent a modest, but not insignificant, genetic contribution to sexual orientation"?
Actually we do, though it may be possible to do a genetic test to find out what the eventual eye colour will be. That’s not the point though: the point is that later life eye colour and later life sexual orientation alike are highly likely to be programmed in by birth, not determined by environmental factors that come later.
Did you read the part in your link that starts "it is also important to recognize that the scientific perspective still understands “nurture” as a part of the natural order...."? (see above)
That’s a different issue from labelling, and in any case the answer to that seems to be to do with the type of belief. An intellectualised belief – that the sun orbits the earth for example – can generally be changed when there’s enough evidence to show it to be wrong. An emotional belief on the other hand – “god”, that you love your children etc – on the the hand cannot be reasoned away. The problem with the god belief though is that people will then act on that belief in ways that affect other people - Vlad’s unpleasantly homophobic denial of “holy” marriage services to gay people for example.
Yes Outrider and I were discussing emotional beliefs. Yes that is the problem with emotional beliefs - people act on them - and as humans can't do away with emotional beliefs we'll just have to learn to work with them.
Edited as I forgot to insert a quote to differentiate BHS's comment from my reply.
While I am here, BHS, did you say gender is an innate characteristic - do you have any studies you can link to on that?