You are an odd sort of doctor (here I take a leap of faith and give you the benefit of the doubt that you’ve earned a medical degree and practice medicine). If you want to provide evidence or proof that AA is a religion you don’t cite sources from social scientists, you cite the opinions of one or more U.S. Supreme Court Justices.
If you have a problem with my hypothesis you cite some source referencing a sociologist rather than citing a citing a scientific paper authored by a team of geneticists (or a team of researchers led by a geneticist).
Not that I have a problem with sociologist, officers of the court, or even with the staunch belief AA, NA, and CA are religions (they are very cult like - just like the Catholic Church and the Democratic and Republican Parties concerning their monopoly on truth and salvation).
But I’m just trying to imagine the look on my biology TA’s face if I handed in to her a scientific biology paper citing a sociologist rather than a geneticists or some scientist in the natural sciences concerning genotypes and resulting phenotypes. :ehh: :dts:
Now, I’m not a scientist, not even a graduate student in a science, but even I know that
facts are all good and great, but
facts do not tell a whole story. One of my biology professors actually pointed this out in a lecture. Because science utilizes
facts a lot. Maybe utilize is the key word.
Or we might think of it analogous to criminology and a crime scene with biological and material evidence collected and several eye witnesses with different versions of events. There certainly are a lot of
facts collected in the evidence. Exactly what happened and if the person accused and arrested is actually guilty (real guilt) or innocent (criminal guilt vs real guilt) is another matter.
So, yes, I would concur alcoholism requires behavior and alcohol, or what you (slightly incorrectly) called learned behavior.
Yet… the biology student in me asks how that contradicted what I said in my hypothesis?
And mind you… I have no problem with my hypothesis - or conjecture - being wrong if in fact it is wrong.
And by the way… even though I’m half black I do not have sickle cell and in fact most black people I know don’t have sickle cell. That does not negate the genetic heritability of sickle cell that runs through certain populations (black people). Similarly, one should not expect all Amerindians to be alcoholics.
Jeez.