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in reply to Tio

Well I could not find any study to show any strong correlation between any bio-chemical or genetic marker and any such behavior....


According to Wikipedia, there seem to be many biological factors that significantly contribute to sexual orientation.
So what about the studies mentioned in this wiki article?

in reply to Tio

I am not an expert on human science, I definitely do not have one specific study in mind. But I see this Wikipedia article that cites many sources and that concludes

Biological theories for explaining the causes of sexual orientation are favored by scientists.


If you are going to write a book with the opposite conclusion, I hope that you are going to address those sources.
Maybe you can point to a scientific review that shares your conclusions?

in reply to Liwott

Oh yeah I have plenty of very recent studies that show there is no strong correlation.

Basically you have to keep in mind one thing: no one can look at a human's biology (genes, brain, chemicals, hormones, etc) and say with certainty that this human is attracted to males, or identifies as a female, or anything like that. For that matter they cannot do so and say one is violent, a criminal, saint, calm, angry, depressed, schizophrenic, and so on. If this was the case, and it was reliable, then we could by now use these to identify people with all sorts of behavioral issues. So do not forget that.

in reply to Tio

there is no strong correlation.


Maybe I do not understand how strong a correlation you are talking about. Of course it is not 100% genetics, but genetics do seem to play an important role.

How accurate is it to depict that question as "people who believe only sex matters" vs "people who thing gender identity and orientation are 100% genetics"?

in reply to Liwott

This is what I mean by strong correlation: if we take Disease A and have a strong correlation with the genes TG and TT, then it means that we can predict who will get the Disease A with a better than 50/50 (random) guess just by looking at the TG and TT genes.

It means if you have 1 million people then a random guy and a scientist: the random guy will randomly say "These people have the Disease A" and the scientist looks at those particular genes and based on that says "These people have the Disease A", the scientist needs to do much better than the random guy. That means better than a guess.

When it comes to sexuality and sexual attraction and take 1 million people, then the random guy and the scientist will do quite the same, 50/50 since the scientist cannot look at any bio-chemical thing and say "This one is attracted to females, this one identifies as a male".

You know what I mean?

in reply to Tio

Ok I see what you mean, it seems indeed that there is no biological factor that can give a strong enough evaluation on whether an individual is indeed part of a sexual minority.
However, the absence of such a strong correlation is not enough to claim that

But there is nothing inborn about sexuality or sexual attraction.


The percentage of queer people is far less than 50%, and so any biological factor that gives a probability higher than that number is something inborn about gender or sexuality

in reply to Liwott

Yes the absence of a proof does not mean the proof of another thing. However considering that we know for sure that the human behavior is very influenced by the environment, then it is very likely this behavior too is part of that influence.

The percentage of queer people is far less than 50%, and so any biological factor that gives a probability higher than that number is something inborn about gender or sexuality


I did not get this...

in reply to Tio

What I mean is that the "random guy" to beat to declare the existence of a biological contribution (ie of somthing inborn about gender or sexuality) is not 50/50. In the absence of favoring factors, not 50% of humans are LGBT+, so why should that be declared as the threshold?
in reply to Liwott

No no 50/50 means "random". Maybe I should not have used that wording. But it is used in english quite a lot. So my point was that to pick who is say "gay" and who is not, will have the same accuracy between the random guy and the scientist. That's how they study these things to see if the prediction is better than chance. Hope you understand my point better now.
in reply to Liwott

@Tio
Regarding my question

How accurate is it to depict that question as "people who believe only sex matters" vs "people who thing gender identity and orientation are 100% genetics"?


I read the article you originally linked and they don't seem at all to defend the idea that gender is something inborn

@Tio
in reply to Liwott

they don't seem at all to defend the idea that gender is something inborn


Gender is a social construct. They at least understand that. I am talking about the gender identity and sexual orientation. They do say that these are "inborn". I do not have the time to send you quotes form the article, but I also had a discussion with the author of the article in the comments. They clearly do.

in reply to Liwott

All of @tio's books contains sources, I mean lots of them, almost every single sentence or claim will have a "(source)" at the end of it, LMAO 🤣

But yeah this is how it should be, this is the scientific way :blobcatcool:

@Tio

Rokosun reshared this.

in reply to Rokosun

Yeah I am obsessed with that. And that's good. However the sources also have to be "proper" sources. That is more difficult to achieve. At the end of the day I am not a politician who can take decisions, I am not a scientist that writes scientific papers, so the way I create the books is I think very much ok for that purpose, of informing people.

Rokosun reshared this.

in reply to Tio

Yes and I think you do a good job at it, reading your books makes me think deeply about our world, and I think this is something the everyone needs right now. And all of your books are free too, no hidden costs, no ads, no data collection, etc, completely trade-free. You really are a big proponent of science and education, we need more people like you who're genuine about educating people 🙂
@liwott

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in reply to Liwott

@Tio

Maybe you can point to a scientific review that shares your conclusions?


To rephrase, can you point to a recent meta-analysis that shares your conclusions?

@Tio
in reply to Tio

Thanks for these links by the way ! I will start by going through the 2016 review cited by Wikipedia when I have some time. Then I'll try to find out what these apparently more recent studies add to it.
in reply to Liwott

As far as I remember I went one by one on every study cited in WIkipedia then read the most actual studies. I have them all saved and all that. Looked at twins studies, intersex, the study of homosexuality and even animals.The strongest correlation they could find, which is weird, is the birth order. So if you are the 4th kid, you are statistically far more likely to become gay later on in life. They theorize why but they do not understand. Being the 6th kid increases the chances even more.
in reply to Tio

So what is your take on all those sources you went through? Are they not reliable? Have all their results failed to be reproduced later on? Is Wikipedia overstating their importance?

In all cases, why not editing Wikipedia with the more recent results then?

in reply to Tio

The thing I hate about this is the involvement of politics here, it doesn't matter whether gender or sexual orientation is influenced by genes or not, people should still have the right to be whoever they want to be. And we don't have to defend gays by saying they're born that way, because if being gay is a learned behavior then being straight also is, there is no "natural behavior" here. I hate this nature argument so much, I wrote an entire post about it - social.trom.tf/display/dbc8dc4…

Rokosun reshared this.

in reply to Rokosun

Tio, what this means for you is that some of these studies you read might be politically motivated instead of being scientifically motivated. This is big problem, we should be able to keep politics away from science, and no scientific studies should be used to oppress people.