Are people born homosexual ?

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Grace & Peace!

As to the second claim, I would clarify it by restating it as:a person’s gender comes from external influences telling them what psychological, behavioral or social attributes their sex is supposed to have and exhibit

You suspect incorrectly.

Happily or unhappily, I do not currently live 2 decades from now…

Of course you can’t deny biological influence–we are, as you say, biological organisms. But we’re also social organisms, and racism and sexism are both functions of social conditioning.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
Mark,
You are clearly misreading me as I never made that first claim. If you think I have, point it out to me and I’ll be happy to clarify. I have stated something along these lines: our sex is biologically irrefutable (we are male or female after all), but gender is not an innate expression of our sex. I’m sure you understand the distinction–you’re obviously a smart guy–but if you don’t, say so (you’ll still be an obviously smart guy).
So, you draw this conclusion about gender based on a study of “taxon”…as defined in the article…
At this point, it may be useful to return to the definition of a
taxon: a category in which members form nonarbitrary classes.
You use what you believe to relevant to your opinions based on this study of “taxon”…and the study itself points out limitations that you seem not to have in drawing erroneous conclusions.
 
Today a lot states are pushing for gay marriage. Including mine Illinois.These days people who oppose gay marriage are considered bigots. But I feel bad when we tell them they can’t marry. In my school there was a transgender kid who ever one made fun of or was grossed out by. He/she basically came close to commiting sucide. Is it really right to oppose gay marriage ? Is it just bigotry?
We don’t know why or when a person becomes homosexual. But the claim is now generally accepted, since no one can prove otherwise. However, I don’t think that homosexuals would really be happy if someone did find a “gay” gene,because then they might get the same treatment as those unborn who are discovered with down’s syndrome. I mean, isn’t part of the acceptance based on the notion that who would CHOOSE to be gay? In that case we get parents saying, well, maybe better dead than gay, because it is still thought of as an oddity.
 
Grace & Peace!

Jillian, when we ignore science, we do it to our detriment. It does not make us more faithful people when we choose to disregard either reality or a new attempt at understanding it. What you have written sounds less like a principled moral position and more like typical American anti-intellectualism.

Indeed. Women too.

Part of the point of the study, though, is that when we say we would like “men to be men,” what we’re actually saying is we would like men’s behavior and attitudes to conform to a series of preconceived notions we quite like to think are intrinsic to maleness but which are not actually native expressions or functions of male biology or psychology.

I don’t doubt that you exhibit this behavior, but what the study suggests is that to the extent to which you identify your or your husband’s behavior or attitudes as a function of your or his sex and not just an expression of the sort of people you’ve happened to wind up becoming, then you happen to be engaged in socially supported and socially acceptable role-play.

Here’s the thing, though: it’s not an opinion. It’s a peer-reviewed scientific study. That doesn’t mean it’s unassailable or not subject to future revision based on a better accumulation of evidence, but it isn’t just an opinion.

It appears we have that in common.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
Mark,

This is a study. It is sort of science and to ignore it may be relevant rather than promoting it to our detriment…
In other words, maybe sexes differ only by a matter of degree, albeit by a larger degree than you’d think at first glance.
All of this leaves open the question of why they differ on average, though. According to yet another study just out, the size of the gap is correlated with the amount of gender inequality in different countries. Women from places where they have much lower incomes, career prospects, etc. compared to men, also endorse more ‘feminine’ traits.
Personally I consider the question of gender differences largely open because I’m skeptical of self-report questionnaire measures in psychology; objective measures of actual behaviour, stuff like crime statistics, seems to me more interesting.
The fact that the great majority of sex offenders are male, for example, must mean something; I’m not sure what, but I don’t think questionnaires will help us find out…
You fail to point out the frailities of the study. You fail to point out that the study itself says it has limitations and it is only one perspective.

It proves nothing that you want to promote.

God created man and woman. They look different, think different, act different and while this study suggests that they have some similarities pscyhologically…that is probably why they are able to get married, have children, and find common purpose.

This has nothing to do with your notions promoting some path to accepting homosexuality as a normal strain of existence. Are people born homosexual. No. This study does not answer that question.
 
Grace & Peace!

Not so. You may be projecting.

It is not, in fact, my way of saying that. Her gender is a social construction, not a biological one. That’s what I was saying. She sees it as “hers” insofar as she has adopted it as her own from the culture around her. And in that sense, yes, it is out of her control because it actually doesn’t come from her or her biology but is imposed on her from outside.

I’m not promoting any such movement. You are misreading me. Chances are, you are misreading me because this sort of conversation is related to some significant emotional trauma in your life and your emotions are getting the better of your judgment.

It is clear that your relationship with your mother is complicated and troubling to you. It gives me no pleasure to see someone in pain, and you are clearly in pain.

But…

…just because you disagree with what I have to say (based on a misreading of what I have to say) on a topic that is very close to the wounds given you by your relationship with your mother does not mean that your mother and I share the same viewpoints or are analogous in any real way.

So while I appreciate that your pain is contributing to a lack of circumspection and a clouding of your judgment here, I want to draw your attention to this: you’re projecting some very serious baggage onto me. You will be in my prayers–that is the only way I know that I can help you bear this burden.

I’m sorry you see it that way. My reaction to Nicolosi is visceral for a number of reasons. I’m sorry that my distaste for his practices translated, to you, as a disregard for your own feelings.

Reparative therapy and it’s methods are widely discredited in the therapeutic industry. Many people nonetheless practice and pursue discredited therapies because they perceive that they experience some benefit. Crystal healing is one such practice that is also discredited but that people pursue and seem to enjoy. I do not dismiss your genuine experience of anything–I dismiss Nicolosi’s methodology and the assumptions on which it is based.

That’s not quite what Nicolosi says. Nicolosi believes that the external world influences gender and sexual orientation, yes, but that it does so by obscuring or damaging what should be an emergent, natural or innate masculinity. The study I cited (and the sociology you’ve already said and demonstrated you know) suggests that there is no innate masculinity or gender that arises from biological sex–masculinity is a social construct extrinsic to sex which elides over the fundamental and overwhelming psychological similarity between the sexes. This leads me to believe that what Nicolosi does is not to repair a damaged and innate masculinity (because there is no such thing), but to construct one that a patient can buy into, only to pass it off as their own innate masculinity hitherto hidden or unexpressed. That’s a bit of sleight-of-hand to me, and strikes me as dishonest.

I agree in part and in principle.

I would only add that the conditioning we experience at the hands of others (and within the context of our time and our place) occurs in tandem with the unfolding of our biology and has lasting effects on that unfolding, for good, ill or indifferent. The takeaway, to some extent, is that the way culture, time, place and others condition us is as “natural” as the way in which biology and genetics condition (I certainly wouldn’t say “program”) us.

I agree 100%.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
There are many individual testimonies that attest to his success. Tell them it doesn’t work.

Was Never Done," Says Former A.P.A. President in Interview
 
Grace & Peace!

Not so. You may be projecting.

It is not, in fact, my way of saying that. Her gender is a social construction, not a biological one. That’s what I was saying. She sees it as “hers” insofar as she has adopted it as her own from the culture around her. And in that sense, yes, it is out of her control because it actually doesn’t come from her or her biology but is imposed on her from outside.

I’m not promoting any such movement. You are misreading me. Chances are, you are misreading me because this sort of conversation is related to some significant emotional trauma in your life and your emotions are getting the better of your judgment.

It is clear that your relationship with your mother is complicated and troubling to you. It gives me no pleasure to see someone in pain, and you are clearly in pain.

But…

…just because you disagree with what I have to say (based on a misreading of what I have to say) on a topic that is very close to the wounds given you by your relationship with your mother does not mean that your mother and I share the same viewpoints or are analogous in any real way.

So while I appreciate that your pain is contributing to a lack of circumspection and a clouding of your judgment here, I want to draw your attention to this: you’re projecting some very serious baggage onto me. You will be in my prayers–that is the only way I know that I can help you bear this burden.

I’m sorry you see it that way. My reaction to Nicolosi is visceral for a number of reasons. I’m sorry that my distaste for his practices translated, to you, as a disregard for your own feelings.

Reparative therapy and it’s methods are widely discredited in the therapeutic industry. Many people nonetheless practice and pursue discredited therapies because they perceive that they experience some benefit. Crystal healing is one such practice that is also discredited but that people pursue and seem to enjoy. I do not dismiss your genuine experience of anything–I dismiss Nicolosi’s methodology and the assumptions on which it is based.

That’s not quite what Nicolosi says. Nicolosi believes that the external world influences gender and sexual orientation, yes, but that it does so by obscuring or damaging what should be an emergent, natural or innate masculinity. The study I cited (and the sociology you’ve already said and demonstrated you know) suggests that there is no innate masculinity or gender that arises from biological sex–masculinity is a social construct extrinsic to sex which elides over the fundamental and overwhelming psychological similarity between the sexes. This leads me to believe that what Nicolosi does is not to repair a damaged and innate masculinity (because there is no such thing), but to construct one that a patient can buy into, only to pass it off as their own innate masculinity hitherto hidden or unexpressed. That’s a bit of sleight-of-hand to me, and strikes me as dishonest.

I agree in part and in principle.

I would only add that the conditioning we experience at the hands of others (and within the context of our time and our place) occurs in tandem with the unfolding of our biology and has lasting effects on that unfolding, for good, ill or indifferent. The takeaway, to some extent, is that the way culture, time, place and others condition us is as “natural” as the way in which biology and genetics condition (I certainly wouldn’t say “program”) us.

I agree 100%.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
Mark,

So here is what we have to do. We have to continue to study the aberrant behavior of homosexuals. The American Psychatric Association and all their propaganda that followed after Homosexuals took the society over erupted into an attempt to silence NARTH in California. You cannot stop someone from speaking and that is what therapy is, talking. So what we have here is the reverse of the Protestant Reformation…

Protestants continue to talk, continue to spread their thoughts and beliefs and whoever listens will listen and you can’t stop them from talking.

The attempt by the LGBT group to silence NARTH should result in a proliferation of talk, thoughts, study and some answers that would please you and allow homosexuals that want help to get it and those that don’t to be left alone.

It would not prevent Homosexuals from spreading their beliefs and thoughts and trying to erode the beliefs of others…

Time will tell…let’s keep studying homosexuals…🙂
 
Grace & Peace!
Mark,

Good try…
Mark has wrongly drawn the conculsion that men and women are not different, just viewed differently based on this study…
You use what you believe to relevant to your opinions based on this study of “taxon”…and the study itself points out limitations that you seem not to have in drawing erroneous conclusions.
Coptic, I’m sorry you’re confused. I suspect that, as is your wont, you’ve not been paying attention to what I’ve written. At this point, I expect that.

I have never denied that both biology and a multitude of external social/environmental factors shape who we are. What I have denied is the assumption that gender represents an essential and normative category (a taxon) which arises naturally (and/or consistently!) out of biology. I.e., there is no essential masculine or feminine ideal which is naturally and universally expressed by human biology. The study is clear–there is no categorical (taxonic) gender difference between men and women in the same way that there is categorical (taxonic) sex difference between men and women: gender difference is dimensional, not taxonic. I have not concluded from any of this that men and women are identical, but I do find the study’s conclusions regarding the fundamental similarities between men and women across a gender spectrum to be convincing and intriguing with respect to a broader consideration of the formation of identity (sexual or otherwise).

Now…can I be criticized for coming down too hard on a “gender is purely social” line when it’s clear that who and what we are is both biologically and socially constructed? I think that’s an accurate criticism, yes. In my defense, I could claim that my emphasis was rhetorical in order to more clearly get my point across, but I won’t make that claim . Nonetheless, a sentence from the previous paragraph may more reasonably be stated thus: “there is no essential masculine or feminine gender ideal which is completely, naturally and universally expressed by human biology alone. Or put in another way, gender difference is not fatalistically determined by- or emergent from sex alone.” But the larger point remains intact: insofar as we believe in a ctaegorically essential masculinity or femininity that looks a certain way, we are buying into a predominantly social product, not a purely biological or natural construct. The paper touches on this:

If gender is dimensional, why do categorical stereotypes of men and women persist in everyday life? Although our research does not speak to this issue, several explanations seem relevant. One reason is that people tend to think categorically (Medin, 1989), or as Fiske (2010) put it, referring to both laypeople and researchers, “we love dichotomies” (p. 689).

…]

Another reason for the endurance of categorical beliefs about gender is that people tend to essentialize human categories when such categories are discrete, have sharp boundaries, are rooted in cultural traditions, are involuntary and immutable, and are perceived to originate in natural distinctions (i.e., are nonarbitrarily part of what makes “living kinds . . . the things they are”; Prentice & Miller, 2007, p. 205; see also Prentice & Miller, 2006). Essentialized categories are seen as having deep significance and meaningful coherence, factors that lead them to play important roles in social perception and behavior. As Prentice and Miller (2006, 2007) noted, however, psychological essentialism need not reflect actual taxonic differences. Nonetheless, “every time people invoke biology to explain gender differences, they further strengthen the view that women and men are different human kinds” (Prentice & Miller, 2007, p. 205). Of course, the widespread attention to “male” and “female” as discrete categories that is virtually endemic across public media and lay theories of gender only serves to bolster these beliefs. Popular examples include self-help gurus such as Gray (1992) and Fein and Schneider (1995), who attribute relational problems between men and women to their putatively taxonic differences in goals, behaviors, and communication styles.

What I find slightly bemusing in all this is that conversations like that in these threads seem to generally come down to the following:

Person A says: Look! I’m gay because I was born that way!
Person B says: No, no. There’s nothing biological or genetic to do with you being gay–it’s all psychological or social. Your innate masculinity has been damaged and has not been able to be expressed naturally, so you’re going to need therapy to repair that categorical and essential but currently broken masculinity which is a part of you by virtue of your sex.

I think person A and person B are both mistaken. Person A is not admitting the effects of social/environmental factors on human development, which is short-sighted; but Person B is conveniently compartmentalizing what is socially/environmentally constructed and what biologically/genetically constructed, which is like “trying to have your cake and eat it, too.” Saying that sexual orientation (insofar as it is not normative) is a purely social/environmental construct while gender (insofar as it most accords with a masculine or feminine ideal) is indefatigably determined by biology/genetics doesn’t seem quite accurate. It seems much more reasonable to say that who we are (including our sexual identity and our gender) is synergistically emergent from a confluence of factors both biological/genetic and social/environmental.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
 
synergistically emergent from a confluence of factors both biological/genetic and social/environmental.
That’s, like, eleventy-billion points in buzzword bingo. You still could have gotten more by using “biogenetic” and “socioenvironmental” 😃
 
Grace & Peace!
There are many individual testimonies that attest to his success. Tell them it doesn’t work.
Buffalo, if the treatment is be considered objectively successful, then results (in this case, change of sexual orientation) should be significantly lasting and consistently demonstrable for a considerable majority of subjects. That does not appear to be the case with NARTH’s treatment.

I’m sure some people perceive a benefit from Nicolosi and his work. That’s fine. People perceive a benefit from crystal therapy, too. But neither crystal therapy nor NARTH/Nicolosi represent real science.

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
 
Grace & Peace!
That’s, like, eleventy-billion points in buzzword bingo. You still could have gotten more by using “biogenetic” and “socioenvironmental” 😃
Whew! I was hoping someone was keeping score. I’m glad it’s you, Monkey, because I appreciate your numerical accuracy. 😉

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
 
In the end it doesn’t really make a difference what we call it now. As shown in your references political correctness had it struck down.

None of this invalidates the health issues and associated costs.
It does, though, because it shows he has an agenda. He’s playing the ‘word game’. He’s using loaded language.
I was going to let this go and move on - but the word gay is ok when trying to talk gay up, but not allowed when dealing with medical negatives?
Yes, because anal sex, and therefore all the problems associated with it, is not unique to homosexuals. Heterosexuals engage in it, too. It’s got nothing to do with political correctness.

I’ll give you an analogy. Christian men are more likely to suffer with a porn addiction. Does this mean that an addiction to porn should be called ‘Christian Sexual Repression Disease’? Of course not.
 
Oh my! All these words/opinions and beliefs…and still so many people are in the unhappy position of being ostracised by their neighbours, and for what? Yes, I believe people are born with their sexual orientation. It would be very odd that so many people thru’ the ages would risk so many penalties just for the hell of it otherwise! Promiscuity is what causes all the problems which have been discussed, and that is true for both heterosexuals and homosexuals. But when committed gay people want to get married and be monogamous, many people want to prevent them. If they are religious, they may want to make a religious commitment, but it is their conscience and that of their church that counts.
Basically I don’t think they believe (and I agree) that some homophobic contributors to the OT were inspired by God in their rantings any more than I believe that God inspired other OT writers to condone slavery, stoning people to death or committing genocide.
If two men or two women want to live together, they should be able to. Whether or not they are sexually active is not anyone else’s business, just as any other neighbours’ sex lives are not our business either.
 
Grace & Peace!
So here is what we have to do. We have to continue to study the aberrant behavior of homosexuals. The American Psychatric Association and all their propaganda that followed after Homosexuals took the society over erupted into an attempt to silence NARTH in California. You cannot stop someone from speaking and that is what therapy is, talking. So what we have here is the reverse of the Protestant Reformation…
Coptic, you seem to be indicating (with words like “aberrant” and “propaganda”) that the study you want conducted should not be impartial, but should be conducted in order to support your particular preconceived notions. If that’s what you’re after: what, really, is the point?

(Also, is there real evidence that homosexuals actually took over the APA–i.e., that homosexual members–either at leadership levels or in the general membership–at some point in the '70’s outnumbered heterosexual members and staged a coup?)

(Also, in what way is opposition to reparative therapy analogous to the reverse of the Protestant Reformation? Is there a reparative therapy opponent who is advocating for Indulgences or burning copies of the Book of Concord?)

(Also, when you say that we should study the “aberrant behavior of homosexuals,” are you suggesting we should not study the “normal” behavior of homosexuals as it relates to or arises out of their homosexuality?)
Protestants continue to talk, continue to spread their thoughts and beliefs and whoever listens will listen and you can’t stop them from talking.
(Help me see how Protestantism specifically and/or Protestant speech specifically is analogous to or illustrative of issues surrounding reparative therapy.)
The attempt by the LGBT group to silence NARTH should result in a proliferation of talk, thoughts, study and some answers that would please you and allow homosexuals that want help to get it and those that don’t to be left alone.
Talk about all this is great! I don’t think NARTH should close its doors or Nicolosi should be out of a job, Coptic–but I do think that what’s important is whether or not NARTH’s or Nicolosi’s therapy represents actual science. There’s no evidence that it does, and the therapy is discredited as a practice among therapists. People can believe in and seek out reparative therapy all they want, but they should know that what they’re seeking is not real science.

Also, it seems as if, to you, the central or defining question regarding someone’s encounter with their same-sex attraction should be, “Do I wish to be cured or not?” I think that question (particularly when promoted as definitive of the experience of same-sex attracted folks) is more than a bit loaded: it assumes a lot regarding the nature of same-sex attraction, is a clear instance of “begging the question,” and represents, moreover, a real impediment to actually understanding same-sex attraction.

Speaking of impediments to understanding, you wrote this in a previous post:
Are people born homosexual. No. This study does not answer that question.
The study does not directly answer that question, no. But given the conflation of gender and sexual orientation in reparative therapy (in which the latter appears to be seen as a function of the former), an inquiry into the nature of gender is not immaterial to the discussion.:eek:
Time will tell…let’s keep studying homosexuals…🙂
Sure! And since we’re keeping an open mind…while we study them, why don’t we listen to them, too? In particular, why don’t we listen to their descriptions of what a good life–a life in which human flourishing and wholeness is both possible and demonstrable–might look like; and then why don’t see if any such lives so lived by them have indeed contributed to the real flourishing of their humanity? Sound good? Okay!👍

Under the Mercy,
Mark

All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!
 
Mark,

So here is what we have to do. We have to continue to study the aberrant behavior of homosexuals. The American Psychatric Association and all their propaganda that followed after Homosexuals took the society over erupted into an attempt to silence NARTH in California. You cannot stop someone from speaking and that is what therapy is, talking. So what we have here is the reverse of the Protestant Reformation…

Protestants continue to talk, continue to spread their thoughts and beliefs and whoever listens will listen and you can’t stop them from talking.

The attempt by the LGBT group to silence NARTH should result in a proliferation of talk, thoughts, study and some answers that would please you and allow homosexuals that want help to get it and those that don’t to be left alone.

It would not prevent Homosexuals from spreading their beliefs and thoughts and trying to erode the beliefs of others…

Time will tell…let’s keep studying homosexuals…🙂
The American Psychiatric Assoc… is 36,000 members. How was it taken over by homosexuals? I’ll bet they have some interesting conventions.

The American Psychological Assoc. is about 150,000 strong. Have they been taken over, too?
 
The American Psychiatric Assoc… is 36,000 members. How was it taken over by homosexuals? I’ll bet they have some interesting conventions.

The American Psychological Assoc. is about 150,000 strong. Have they been taken over, too?
This calls for an hypothesis and experiment. If you go to a convention and someone grabs your nuts, tell us if you have accepted or rejected your hypothesis.
 
What I find slightly bemusing in all this is that conversations like that in these threads seem to generally come down to the following:

Person A says: Look! I’m gay because I was born that way!
Person B says: No, no. There’s nothing biological or genetic to do with you being gay–it’s all psychological or social. Your innate masculinity has been damaged and has not been able to be expressed naturally, so you’re going to need therapy to repair that categorical and essential but currently broken masculinity which is a part of you by virtue of your sex.
I have lesbian friends and associates. Aside from the fact their relationships are structured on the Yin/Yang of one being in the feminine role and one being in the masculine role (which is usually the case with gay male couples as well, but not always), it was the issue of gender identity (i.e., I’m a ‘girl’ born into a boys body) what I was speaking of. That is not specifically gay, that is what leads to transsexuals. Dr. Nicolosi began to speak about that where I tuned him off.

Gender is a social construct but the fact is neither here nor there in attacking psychological therapy to rectify the situation of a person that is a male who is but of the female gender (socially constructed).

In other words when little boys are dressed not as girls but 25 year old women with painted toes, they have received their views of gender (female in this case) from society.

Isolated one might be genderless. But even ferrel kids adapt behavioral traits of the animals they are around. Institutionalized children left in some of the orphanages of Eastern Europe, where they rarely have human contact and affection, are some of the most mentally and emotionally damaged children on earth.

Gender affiliation functions much in the social life of humans much the way our tool culture is put to practical use for us.

Masculinity does not have to be biological heritable to be real.
 
The American Psychiatric Assoc… is 36,000 members. How was it taken over by homosexuals? I’ll bet they have some interesting conventions.

The American Psychological Assoc. is about 150,000 strong. Have they been taken over, too?
Epan,

You decide…

narth.com/docs/deemphasizes.html
APA’s New Pamphlet on Homosexuality
De-emphasizes the Biological Argument, Supports
a Client’s Right to Self-Determination
The APA has now begun to acknowledge what most scientists have long known:
that a bio-psycho-social model of causation best fits the data.
A. Dean Byrd, Ph.D., MBA, MPH
March 6, 2008 - In 1998, the American Psychological Association (APA) published a brochure titled “Answers to Your Questions about Sexual Orientation and Homosexuality.”
This particular document was ostensibly published to provide definitive answers about homosexuality. However, few of the assertions made in the brochure could find any basis in psychological science. Clearly a document anchored more in activism than in empiricism, the brochure was simply a demonstration of how far APA had strayed from science, and how much it had capitulated to activism.
 
No dear, of course they are not.

There is not any proof that even slightly bears out some of the crazy rationalisations people put forward do for this, merely speculation - but here’s the thing - it is not considered ethical to question this with too much enthusiasm - remember there are parts of the world where people like to saw the heads off homosexuals and there are other parts of the world which are marginal on this - it has not really been “on” to go nuts on proving that homosexuals either make a choice or have their tendency formed when there is so much hatred for them in the world.

That said, you may think attacking the predominant religion in the countries where they are safe would be an obviously stupid thing to do. Apparently not though.
 
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