ChatterBank36 mins ago
Homosexuality
129 Answers
1) Is it nature's way of telling us to keep our population under control?
2) Nature or nurture ?
Discuss.
(Now I'll duck and run for cover!)
2) Nature or nurture ?
Discuss.
(Now I'll duck and run for cover!)
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sqad, your "end of species" argument seems a bit feeble to me.
The human species is an ever adapting entity and there is - by all accounts - a fluctuating percentage of individuals who are of a non-breeding sexual persuasion amongst (arguably) a majority of people who either breed or at least have the potential to.
Of course I am addressing issue #1 of my OP when I say that I believe that as a unique species we have innate mechanisms to control ourselves for our successful future.
My suspicion is that you are hiding behind some pre-meditated 'survival of the fittest' b*llocks in order to rationalise your personal revulsion of homosexuality.
The human species is an ever adapting entity and there is - by all accounts - a fluctuating percentage of individuals who are of a non-breeding sexual persuasion amongst (arguably) a majority of people who either breed or at least have the potential to.
Of course I am addressing issue #1 of my OP when I say that I believe that as a unique species we have innate mechanisms to control ourselves for our successful future.
My suspicion is that you are hiding behind some pre-meditated 'survival of the fittest' b*llocks in order to rationalise your personal revulsion of homosexuality.
@doctor db - Just a minor, very pedantic point You are right that Herbert Spencer is credited with coining the term, "survival of the fittest" ( as I mentioned in my own post on the previous page).
Its wrong to say that Darwin never used the phrase though. From wiki
"Darwin first used Spencer's new phrase "survival of the fittest" as a synonym for natural selection in the fifth edition of On the Origin of Species, published in 1869.[2][3] Darwin meant it as a metaphor for "better adapted for immediate, local environment", not the common inference of "in the best physical shape".[4] Hence, it is not a scientific description"
Its wrong to say that Darwin never used the phrase though. From wiki
"Darwin first used Spencer's new phrase "survival of the fittest" as a synonym for natural selection in the fifth edition of On the Origin of Species, published in 1869.[2][3] Darwin meant it as a metaphor for "better adapted for immediate, local environment", not the common inference of "in the best physical shape".[4] Hence, it is not a scientific description"