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theapportioner
Feb 7th, 2004, 12:49 AM
Love That Dare Not Squeak Its Name
By DINITIA SMITH

Published: February 7, 2004


Roy and Silo, two chinstrap penguins at the Central Park Zoo in Manhattan, are completely devoted to each other. For nearly six years now, they have been inseparable. They exhibit what in penguin parlance is called "ecstatic behavior": that is, they entwine their necks, they vocalize to each other, they have sex. Silo and Roy are, to anthropomorphize a bit, gay penguins. When offered female companionship, they have adamantly refused it. And the females aren't interested in them, either.

At one time, the two seemed so desperate to incubate an egg together that they put a rock in their nest and sat on it, keeping it warm in the folds of their abdomens, said their chief keeper, Rob Gramzay. Finally, he gave them a fertile egg that needed care to hatch. Things went perfectly. Roy and Silo sat on it for the typical 34 days until a chick, Tango, was born. For the next two and a half months they raised Tango, keeping her warm and feeding her food from their beaks until she could go out into the world on her own. Mr. Gramzay is full of praise for them.

"They did a great job," he said. He was standing inside the glassed-in penguin exhibit, where Roy and Silo had just finished lunch. Penguins usually like a swim after they eat, and Silo was in the water. Roy had finished his dip and was up on the beach.

Roy and Silo are hardly unusual. Milou and Squawk, two young males, are also beginning to exhibit courtship behavior, hanging out with each other, billing and bowing. Before them, the Central Park Zoo had Georgey and Mickey, two female Gentoo penguins who tried to incubate eggs together. And Wendell and Cass, a devoted male African penguin pair, live at the New York Aquarium in Coney Island. Indeed, scientists have found homosexual behavior throughout the animal world.

This growing body of science has been increasingly drawn into charged debates about homosexuality in American society, on subjects from gay marriage to sodomy laws, despite reluctance from experts in the field to extrapolate from animals to humans. Gay groups argue that if homosexual behavior occurs in animals, it is natural, and therefore the rights of homosexuals should be protected. On the other hand, some conservative religious groups have condemned the same practices in the past, calling them "animalistic."

But if homosexuality occurs among animals, does that necessarily mean that it is natural for humans, too? And that raises a familiar question: if homosexuality is not a choice, but a result of natural forces that cannot be controlled, can it be immoral?

The open discussion of homosexual behavior in animals is relatively new. "There has been a certain cultural shyness about admitting it," said Frans de Waal, whose 1997 book, "Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape" (University of California Press), unleashed a torrent of discussion about animal sexuality. Bonobos, apes closely related to humans, are wildly energetic sexually. Studies show that whether observed in the wild or in captivity, nearly all are bisexual, and nearly half their sexual interactions are with the same sex. Female bonobos have been observed to engage in homosexual activity almost hourly.

Before his own book, "American scientists who investigated bonobos never discussed sex at all," said Mr. de Waal, director of the Living Links Center of the Yerkes Primate Center at Emory University in Atlanta. "Or they sometimes would show two females having sex together, and would say, `The females are very affectionate.' "

Then in 1999, Bruce Bagemihl published "Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity" (St. Martin's Press), one of the first books of its kind to provide an overview of scholarly studies of same-sex behavior in animals. Mr. Bagemihl said homosexual behavior had been documented in some 450 species. (Homosexuality, he says, refers to any of these behaviors between members of the same sex: long-term bonding, sexual contact, courtship displays or the rearing of young.) Last summer the book was cited by the American Psychiatric Association and other groups in a "friend of the court" brief submitted to the Supreme Court in Lawrence v. Texas, a case challenging a Texas anti-sodomy law. The court struck down the law.

"Sexual Exuberance" was also cited in 2000 by gay rights groups opposed to Ballot Measure 9, a proposed Oregon statute prohibiting teaching about homosexuality or bisexuality in public schools. The measure lost.

In his book Mr. Bagemihl describes homosexual activity in a broad spectrum of animals. He asserts that while same-sex behavior is sometimes found in captivity, it is actually seen more frequently in studies of animals in the wild.

Among birds, for instance, studies show that 10 to 15 percent of female western gulls in some populations in the wild are homosexual. Females perform courtship rituals, like tossing their heads at each other or offering small gifts of food to each other, and they establish nests together. Occasionally they mate with males and produce fertile eggs but then return to their original same-sex partners. Their bonds, too, may persist for years.

Among mammals, male and female bottlenose dolphins frequently engage in homosexual activity, both in captivity and in the wild. Homosexuality is particularly common among young male dolphin calves. One male may protect another that is resting or healing from wounds inflicted by a predator. When one partner dies, the other may search for a new male mate. Researchers have noted that in some cases same-sex behavior is more common for dolphins in captivity.

Male and female rhesus macaques, a type of monkey, also exhibit homosexuality in captivity and in the wild. Males are affectionate to each other, touching, holding and embracing. Females smack their lips at each other and play games like hide-and-seek, peek-a-boo and follow the leader. And both sexes mount members of their own sex.

Paul L. Vasey, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at the University of Lethbridge in Canada, who studies homosexual behavior in Japanese macaques, is editing a new book on homosexual behavior in animals, to be published by Cambridge University Press. This kind of behavior among animals has been observed by scientists as far back as the 1700's, but Mr. Vasey said one reason there had been few books on the topic was that "people don't want to do the research because they don't want to have suspicions raised about their sexuality."

Some scientists say homosexual behavior in animals is not necessarily about sex. Marlene Zuk, a professor of biology at the University of California at Riverside and author of "Sexual Selections: What We Can and Can't Learn About Sex From Animals" (University of California Press, 2002), notes that scientists have speculated that homosexuality may have an evolutionary purpose, ensuring the survival of the species. By not producing their own offspring, homosexuals may help support or nurture their relatives' young. "That is a contribution to the gene pool," she said.

For Janet Mann, a professor of biology and psychology at Georgetown University, who has studied same-sex behavior in dolphin calves, their homosexuality "is about bond formation," she said, "not about being sexual for life."

She said that studies showed that adult male dolphins formed long-term alliances, sometimes in large groups. As adults, they cooperate to entice a single female and keep other males from her. Sometimes they share the female, or they may cooperate to help one male. "Male-male cooperation is extremely important," Ms. Mann said. The homosexual behavior of the young calves "could be practicing" for that later, crucial adult period, she added.

But, scientists say, just because homosexuality is observed in animals doesn't mean that it is only genetically based. "Homosexuality is extraordinarily complex and variable," Mr. Bagemihl said. "We look at animals as pure biology and pure genetics, and they are not." He noted that "the occurrence of same-sex behavior in animals provides support for the nurture side as well." He cited as an example the ruff, a type of Arctic sandpiper. There are four different classes of male ruffs, each differing from the others genetically. The two that differ most from each other are most similar in their homosexual behaviors.

Ms. Zuk said, "You have inclinations that are more or less supported by our genes and in some environmental circumstances get expressed." She used the analogy of right- or left-handedness, thought to be genetically based. "But you can teach naturally left-handed children to use their right hand," she pointed out.

Still, scientists warn about drawing conclusions about humans. "For some people, what animals do is a yardstick of what is and isn't natural," Mr. Vasey said. "They make a leap from saying if it's natural, it's morally and ethically desirable."

But he added: "Infanticide is widespread in the animal kingdom. To jump from that to say it is desirable makes no sense. We shouldn't be using animals to craft moral and social policies for the kinds of human societies we want to live in. Animals don't take care of the elderly. I don't particularly think that should be a platform for closing down nursing homes."

Mr. Bagemihl is also wary of extrapolating. "In Nazi Germany, one very common interpretation of homosexuality was that it was animalistic behavior, subhuman," he said.

What the animal studies do show, Ms. Zuk observed, is that "sexuality is a lot broader term than people want to think."

"You have this idea that the animal kingdom is strict, old-fashioned Roman Catholic," she said, "that they have sex just to procreate."

In bonobos, she noted, "you see expressions of sex outside the period when females are fertile. Suddenly you are beginning to see that sex is not necessarily about reproduction."

"Sexual expression means more than making babies," Ms. Zuk said. "Why are we surprised? People are animals."

ItalianStereotype
Feb 7th, 2004, 01:30 AM
there was a time when I would (and did) adamantly detest homosexuals and bisexuals, especially on these boards, but I've recently changed my views on the topic.

Big Papa Goat
Feb 7th, 2004, 01:49 AM
I think its really irrelevant whether homosexuality is natural or a choice. There are plenty of natural impulses that shouldn't be acted on, and plenty of 'unnatural' choices that are in no way harmful or wrong.

Big McLargehuge
Feb 7th, 2004, 03:10 AM
Female bonobos have been observed to engage in homosexual activity almost hourly.
Hot lesbian bonobo action

Helm
Feb 7th, 2004, 05:53 AM
The more interesting thing about all this for me is this: If homosexuality and bisexuality is something natural in the sense that it's not some sort of isolated error but instead a formal percent of some species gets born bi or homosexual, then what purpose can same-sex mating serve in a natural environment? The purpose of sexual intercourse in nature is to procreate the species, not to have fun fucking. Doesn't an animal that cannot spawn progeny (lol) become useless instinctively. The second strongest instinct is that of creating life.

I see two answers to all this. Either a few natural abberation cases somehow survived natural clensing (and we human observers might have been more than a little involved in that) and spread their defective genes, or a large fraction of our academic knowledge on instinctual urges is flawed in some ways. The incidents seem far too widespread for the first answer to be completely valid... And even if it was, and sex was still defined narrowly as means of procreation in the animal kingdom, then why give pleasure recievers to animals at all? There are quite a few documented cases of species mating and having offspring where the sexual process is either completely uneventful in terms of sensory payoff, or even painful and still those species are instinctively driven to mate nonetheless. They don't need to have fun doing it. So why orgasms?

For humans, the pleasure derived from sex serves as additional urging towards mating, but given that we have a degree of free will (don't debate this, we've had threads upon threads. I'm presupposing and so fuck you) the orgasm factor would be a pretty big drive for people if we could theoretically remove the instinctual hardwiring (rip out the ippocambus from the brain? Fun!). So for people, it sort of makes sense for nature to provide additional means of persuasion to procreate. But most animals are anything but self-aware. Instinctual automations that would and indeed can procreate based on sort-of scripted behaviour. So why on earth would they fuck for fun and not for children?

Monkeys I can understand, since they're closer in terms of awareness to a human than to an amoeba. Same for dolphins, and a few other species. But... gulls?


I think we have defined some aspects of animal and human genetic behaviour too narrowly.

FartinMowler
Feb 7th, 2004, 10:52 AM
Could it possibly be that any animal looks for companionship and animals that have a brain the size of a walnut cannot distinguish the fact that they are attracted to the same sex?

Big Papa Goat
Feb 7th, 2004, 01:20 PM
But can you really have a desire for companionship if you're not self aware? I suppose you could look at some pets and say its possible.

But ya, the idea of homosexuality being genetic runs into some big problems when it comes to sexual selection. :/

Rez
Feb 7th, 2004, 02:00 PM
why is homosexuality morraly questionable?

i could never see how or talk to anyone who though it *was* wrong without it resulting in either complete logic failure or bible-thumping.

two men love each other. two women love each other. it's the same love that a man and woman have for each other. how the hell do you go against that, or better yet, get *angry* at it? >:

Brandon
Feb 7th, 2004, 02:04 PM
Outside of religion, I really don't see how homosexuality could be considered wrong by any ethical standard.

The One and Only...
Feb 7th, 2004, 02:04 PM
Well, it could conceivabley violate the very utilitarian ethics upon which modern "nihilist" liberalism has built itself. After all, the pleasure that the majority gain from supressing homosexuals may theoretically be higher than the pain caused to the homosexuals. Same thing with the murder of jews in Germany.

But, hey. That's why I reject utilitarian ethics.

Jeanette X
Feb 7th, 2004, 03:09 PM
But ya, the idea of homosexuality being genetic runs into some big problems when it comes to sexual selection. :/

Maybe it's just how the population is kept under control.

kellychaos
Feb 7th, 2004, 04:14 PM
In Stranger In A Strange Land, Heinlein theorized (although fictionally) that it took up to five different and distinct sexualities to create a human life.

mburbank
Feb 7th, 2004, 06:28 PM
Those Penguins should come to Massachusettes and get married.

theapportioner
Feb 8th, 2004, 02:59 PM
I guess that means Darwin was wrong and Creationism is right !!!

mburbank
Feb 8th, 2004, 03:27 PM
Laisez faire creationsim.

Ronnie Raygun
Feb 8th, 2004, 03:37 PM
I don't care if a man wants to fuck another man. That's between them and is none of my business.

Marriage on the other hand should have nothing to do with the law and should stay in the churches where it was invented.

Civil Unions should replace marriage as far as the law is concerned and then religious establishment would have nothing to bitch about.

mburbank
Feb 8th, 2004, 04:11 PM
Are you saying that all marriages not related to a speciffic religous institution should be civil unions, and the Marriage should be an exclussivley religous institution?

So that say, any marriage performed by a judge or a justuice of the peace, any common law marriage would be a civil union and not a marriage?

I'm not saying anything, just looking for clarity, but a distinction between legal nd religous marriage seems like an arguable position.

Ronnie Raygun
Feb 8th, 2004, 04:34 PM
I think that the government should have NOTHING to do with "MARRIAGE"......

KevinTheOmnivore
Feb 8th, 2004, 05:37 PM
I think I might agree with Ronnie.........:(

Ronnie Raygun
Feb 8th, 2004, 05:40 PM
what hapened to "herbivore"?

Emu
Feb 8th, 2004, 06:22 PM
He started eating meat again.

KevinTheOmnivore
Feb 8th, 2004, 06:39 PM
what hapened to "herbivore"?

Yeah, I'm a Republican who likes to club baby seals now, too.

Ronnie Raygun
Feb 8th, 2004, 06:57 PM
Oh! I see.

So where is Herbivore?

KevinTheOmnivore
Feb 8th, 2004, 07:08 PM
I'm his cousin.

Ronnie Raygun
Feb 8th, 2004, 07:53 PM
That doesn't answer my question though, does it?

theapportioner
Feb 8th, 2004, 08:08 PM
He died of malnutrition.

Ronnie Raygun
Feb 8th, 2004, 08:12 PM
Gezzz. I hope not.

Helm
Feb 9th, 2004, 01:03 PM
Was my post in this thread ignored because it was stupid or something? I'd really like to discuss some of the aspects of this topic :(

Big McLargehuge
Feb 9th, 2004, 01:34 PM
One thing I would like to know is how are these homosexual animals treated in their groups? Especially, how are the animals who usually form groups with a "head" treated? I mean, does the alpha-male ignore the other homosexual animals because as such they do not pose a threat to his dominance?

sspadowsky
Feb 9th, 2004, 02:23 PM
And is their roost as tastefully decorated as one might expect?

kellychaos
Feb 9th, 2004, 04:22 PM
Sounds like a new Discovery Channel program < insert funny play on words for gay animal home improvement show > .

da blob
Feb 9th, 2004, 04:25 PM
what purpose can same-sex mating serve in a natural environment? The purpose of sexual intercourse in nature is to procreate the species, not to have fun fucking. Doesn't an animal that cannot spawn progeny (lol) become useless instinctively.
(...)
Either a few natural abberation cases somehow survived natural clensing (and we human observers might have been more than a little involved in that) and spread their defective genes, or a large fraction of our academic knowledge on instinctual urges is flawed in some ways. The incidents seem far too widespread for the first answer to be completely valid...


Your first assumption is indeed a viable one. Because of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (population genetics). I. e. as deletere as a given recessive might be, it will not disapear from a population, rather, an equilibrium will establish itself over time, with a more or less constant proportion of affected and carriers.
BTW, "deletere" is used in respect to evolution - i.e. if we consider the propagation of his genetic material as an individual's only purpose. Not any kind of "moral" connotation here of course.





For humans, the pleasure derived from sex serves as additional urging towards mating, but given that we have a degree of free will the orgasm factor would be a pretty big drive for people if we could theoretically remove the instinctual hardwiring. So for people, it sort of makes sense for nature to provide additional means of persuasion to procreate. But most animals are anything but self-aware. Instinctual automations that would and indeed can procreate based on sort-of scripted behaviour. So why on earth would they fuck for fun and not for children?
(edited)


Bonobos do not fuck for fun actually, having sex is a mean of reducing tension among individual (hierarchic tensions). So it does serve an evolutionary purpose, maintaining the social group's cohesion = the survival rate. In the penguins' case cited above, I believe it is not an occurence of "fucking for fun" either - they indeed seeked procreation, too bad they chose a mate of the wrong sex.
On the other hand, I used to have a stud dog whom we had perform almost exclusively via AI. As all of the dogs I have known in this case, not only was there absolutely no problem in collecting him without any female in oestrus nearby, he actually seeked it. He started to ask to be put on the table where we used to put him for the collection whenever we had visitors with a dog (be it male or female), then later on whenever we had visitors at all. [And of course whenever one of our own bitches were in heat, but this would count as reproductive instinct, although someow flawed].
I don't know what conclusion to draw from this, except that genital pleasure does exist in higher mammals, and not only as a tension reducer mean as in the bonobos' case, but for its own sake. Yet it is still far from what we call "sexuality". And it is indeed a case where human intervention has a lot to do with the "deviation of instinct", on a large and small time-scale as well (long time domesticated animals + a matter of "education" of the individual by man).
It kinda looks like genital pleasure raises to counterbalance "civilisation's" effects - them being, to widen the gap between the self-conscious animal and his instincts.


But then, I don't know, just thinking out loud.

da blob
Feb 9th, 2004, 04:29 PM
Sorry for the typos / misspellings / grammar errors. Too lazy to correct.
I am no native english speaker, remember, so fuque.

mburbank
Feb 9th, 2004, 04:56 PM
Sonny Bonobo.

Helm
Feb 9th, 2004, 06:12 PM
Your first assumption is indeed a viable one. Because of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (population genetics). I. e. as deletere as a given recessive might be, it will not disapear from a population, rather, an equilibrium will establish itself over time, with a more or less constant proportion of affected and carriers.
BTW, "deletere" is used in respect to evolution - i.e. if we consider the propagation of his genetic material as an individual's only purpose. Not any kind of "moral" connotation here of course.

So you can see it as a natural error that due to a number of factors survives... In addition to stress removal as you say below I can see how this could be true. Taking into account all the higher mammals that masturbate also... So a combination of misdirected instinct, possibility of natural error, stress removal and also habitualization and human intervention. This works for me, although it's obvious that more information needs to be catalogued. The gulls still don't make sense.

And obviously my interest in the subject isn't due to some moral issue, at least not in a primary way. If it turned out that homosexualism is somehow naturally validated then I suppose it would change my viewpoint on the subject somewhat. But not in a very drastic way because natural behaviour, as it was noted does not equal morally acceptable behaviour to begin with.





I don't know what conclusion to draw from this, except that genital pleasure does exist in higher mammals, and not only as a tension reducer mean as in the bonobos' case, but for its own sake. Yet it is still far from what we call "sexuality".

I know I'm taking this a bit far, but why? Why do higher mammals differ in this way from more basic organisms. In the deterministic process that prevades evolution, what purpose in terms of efficiency does sexual pleasure serve? Given modern understanding of evolution, it doesn't seem to do much, actually. It is only if one supposes that sexual pleasure or indeed any other psychosomatic sensory perception plays an intergal role in nature's plan for evolved lifeforms that any of this makes sense!


And don't worry, I'm greek so english isn't my first language either and besides, all the americans aren't paying attention anymore.

da blob
Feb 9th, 2004, 08:31 PM
So you can see it as a natural error that due to a number of factors survives... In addition to stress removal as you say below I can see how this could be true. Taking into account all the higher mammals that masturbate also... So a combination of misdirected instinct, possibility of natural error, stress removal and also habitualization and human intervention. This works for me, although it's obvious that more information needs to be catalogued. The gulls still don't make sense.

Agreed. Except that I dunno why the gulls' case wouldn't make any less sense. Cause they're only birds ? And besides, given the way the article reads, I'm not exactly sure there's any "sexuality" involved in their so-called homosexuality. I mean, two homosexual female gulls, what would they do ? Stick their beaks up one another's, huh, hole (don't know the proper term for birds in english) ? Hahahah I'd love to see that. So my guess is that it's a kind of mate-like bond to an individual of the same sex, nothing "homosexual" per se.



I don't know what conclusion to draw from this, except that genital pleasure does exist in higher mammals, and not only as a tension reducer mean as in the bonobos' case, but for its own sake. Yet it is still far from what we call "sexuality".
I know I'm taking this a bit far, but why? Why do higher mammals differ in this way from more basic organisms. In the deterministic process that prevades evolution, what purpose in terms of efficiency does sexual pleasure serve? Given modern understanding of evolution, it doesn't seem to do much, actually. It is only if one supposes that sexual pleasure or indeed any other psychosomatic sensory perception plays an intergal role in nature's plan for evolved lifeforms that any of this makes sense!

I did give my point of view on the "why" : "It kinda looks like genital pleasure raises to counterbalance "civilisation's" effects - them being, to widen the gap between the self-conscious animal and his instincts. "
Well of course this would apply to man only, and *maybe* to the species his influence has taken afar from their "wild" status (domestication). But maybe we could see genital pleasure as an incentive to mate over other contradictory instincts, said pleasure existing in many species in a more basic form - kinda like the pleasure obtained from eating certain particularly tasty foods, which does exist in many species, too.
And then as culturalization (duh is this a word ?) happens, a powerful incentive (i.e. orgasm as we know it) has been selected as more "sex driven" individuals have had a better reproductive success, when culture may have lessened the pure reproductive instinct or gotten in its way. For instance, culture has created codes / taboos and other frames for reproduction to be fitted in, so that pure reproductive instinct cannot be fullfilled as it would be in animals. Other example - me. I do not intend to have any children - educated decision, where mind / consciousness has blocked the possible instincts that might have surfaced. So, the only chance for my genes to be spread would be that I'd be sex-driven enough (highly motivated by sexual pleasure) so that THIS would overcome my conscious reflexion. Forgetting about contraception as the urge for pleasure would preceed over reflexion. Thank God I'm not that dumb hahaha.
OK, so this may give an explaination for man, but hardly for mammals, even the higher ones. Because there's no culture / reflexion / self consciousness to counterbalance. But as I said earlier, there might be other things, like, as an animal's life pattern gets more complicated as he gets higher on the scale, the most important instinct has to have stronger incentive so as to overcome whatever else is getting in the way at the moment (other instincts / environmental variables).


Tell me if I do not quite make sense, it's 2:30 here so huh I might be somehow slow brained at the moment.

ziggytrix
Feb 9th, 2004, 08:42 PM
i'm paying attention.

the arguable existence of a genetic predisposition toward homosexually and the personal belief that it doesn't hurt anyone make me neutral on the morailty of it.

Jeanette X
Feb 10th, 2004, 12:03 AM
And obviously my interest in the subject isn't due to some moral issue, at least not in a primary way. If it turned out that homosexualism is somehow naturally validated then I suppose it would change my viewpoint on the subject somewhat. But not in a very drastic way because natural behaviour, as it was noted does not equal morally acceptable behaviour to begin with.

It's homosexuality, not homosexualism. :(

And I thought you Greeks liked this sort of thing?

Helm
Feb 10th, 2004, 07:48 AM
like, as an animal's life pattern gets more complicated as he gets higher on the scale, the most important instinct has to have stronger incentive so as to overcome whatever else is getting in the way at the moment (other instincts / environmental variables).

That's basically what seems to be the case. Do you see that as man becomes more cerebral and less emotional, his sexual drive could gradually wither to nothing? Could man reach a point where he is -from an evolutionary standpoint- useless, or will some other instinctual failsafe come into play?

I am interested in this topic so much because I am trying to be free from instinctual drives.


Anyway, thanks for your interesting replies. It's a good thing this thread didn't deteriorate to yet another hopeless oao vs. whomever thing. We have enough of those.

the arguable existence of a genetic predisposition toward homosexually and the personal belief that it doesn't hurt anyone make me neutral on the morailty of it.

I morally view heterosexuality and homosexuality to be equal. That is to say, that both practises are -whether natural or not- animal behaviour, and as my personal philosophy calls for their gradual abandonment. Man should choose what he wants to be, and do. I do not see anything particularily different with homosexuality since heterosexuality doesn't strictly mean making babies either. I do see however, mankind in their reactionary attempt towards nature, trying to keep the good stuff about sex going for them, while getting the whole making babies deal out of the way. Which is a simplistic stance. In that sense, what we are talking about, how nature uses pleasure to make sure we mate, is a defective practice.

Man should stop trying to regulate the conditions under we indulges in his instinctual urges, and start trying to control those urges themselves.

It's homosexuality, not homosexualism.

And I thought you Greeks liked this sort of thing?

Do you like, cry every time I make a mistake, or what? And that's like asking if all americans are mcdonalds sustained, politically inept white trash. Oh, wait! :lol

AChimp
Feb 10th, 2004, 10:33 AM
Admit it, though. All you Greeks love the bum secks.

Jeanette X
Feb 10th, 2004, 12:18 PM
It's homosexuality, not homosexualism.

And I thought you Greeks liked this sort of thing?

Do you like, cry every time I make a mistake, or what? And that's like asking if all americans are mcdonalds sustained, politically inept white trash. Oh, wait! :lol[/quote]

Helm, I didn't mean it was a bad thing. :( Ancient Greece is the cradle of western civilization, and the fact that the didn't lynch great people like Sappho for being homosexual makes them pretty damn cool in my book.

AChimp
Feb 10th, 2004, 02:09 PM
Yeah, but, you know... still. :|

da blob
Feb 10th, 2004, 04:38 PM
Do you see that as man becomes more cerebral and less emotional, his sexual drive could gradually wither to nothing? Could man reach a point where he is -from an evolutionary standpoint- useless, or will some other instinctual failsafe come into play?
I am interested in this topic so much because I am trying to be free from instinctual drives.

I think it depends on which level.
At an individual level, it might be possible as I personally believe in the power of mind over flesh, however I do not know whether it'd be possible to totally "anihilate" those instinctual drives, as much as to "lock" them.
In an evolutionary perspective, it is IMO simply not possible that humans evolve away from their instincts unless they evolve towards another mean of reproduction than sexual pairing - like parthenogenesis or whatever else. Which is not likely as sexuated reproduction seems to be the most "evolved" way of spreading genes so far. Unless something new appears, you never know.

Well my personnal opinion is that as much as a thinking animal as we are, it is still in our nature to be animals. I have been in contact with many animals, observed their group behaviours as well as those of humans with a very objective eye, and I've found this to be true, that most humans are exclusively instinct driven, not any less than any other animal. Far from allowing the masses to free themselves from their instincts' slavery, their ability for reflexion is mostly used to serve those instincts. Maybe this is nature's revenge against civilization.

My own path of reflexion on the subject has led me to believe that to free myself from my instincts as much as possible I need to aknowledge them, for what they are, no more but no less. I feel in no way lessened by the aknowledgement of being an animal in nature, and knowing my instincts and recognizing them when they are at work allows me to use my mind to control / shut / work around them better than trying to anihilate them.



In that sense, what we are talking about, how nature uses pleasure to make sure we mate, is a defective practice.

But none of nature's way is a sure, straight, flawless one. There are bugs everywhere and this is why there is a need for evolution after all. Like, what about reproduction instinct being in contradiction with survival instinct, it can lead to pretty unefficient situations in some animals. But on the whole there will be small adjustments made here and there and it'll always end up working. Or the species will disappear. So I guess we'll see if the sexual pleasure thing was a bad idea in a "few" (hahahaha) years, but I agree with you that it has the potential for a "bad idea", evolution-wise.


Man should stop trying to regulate the conditions under we indulges in his instinctual urges, and start trying to control those urges themselves.

Agreed. However most can not, and do not even want to.



And that's like asking if all americans are mcdonalds sustained, politically inept white trash. Oh, wait! :lol

I didn't say it. Everybody, *look* how I didn't even said a single word about this.
Mwahahahahahaha

Immortal Goat
Feb 10th, 2004, 05:53 PM
Bonobos do not fuck for fun actually, having sex is a mean of reducing tension among individual (hierarchic tensions).

I should HOPE not. I mean, have you SEEN Cher? Why would Sonny Bonobo fuck HER for fun?

*Ba-dum, CSHHHH!*

Thank you, thank you, I'm here all week. Try the veal!



EDIT: :( sorry, didn't realize I stole Max's joke. :(

Helm
Feb 11th, 2004, 06:07 AM
Helm, I didn't mean it was a bad thing. Ancient Greece is the cradle of western civilization, and the fact that the didn't lynch great people like Sappho for being homosexual makes them pretty damn cool in my book.

It's a stereotype, generally. Blatant homosexualism (public aknowledgement of engaging in anal penetration. Say it with me. anal penetration) was frowned upon in ancient greece. Homosexuality in ancient greece was more of the fondle and caress variety. Nevertheless in modern days anal sex is as popular in greece as it is in every other part of the western (at least) world. I see nothing especially bad about it, it is just the same as any other sort of sexual practice.


Admit it, though. All you Greeks love the bum secks.

I like goats.



however I do not know whether it'd be possible to totally "anihilate" those instinctual drives, as much as to "lock" them.

Freedom, for me is defined on the level of application. So it's not so much a matter of completely annihilating the instinctual drives, as it is to be able to completely override them when it comes to deciding and acting. Freedom is action. I operate under the premise that the less you indulge your instinctual needs, the more tame they become. This is not proven, but from personal experience all the other instincts (dominance, affection, self-preservation etc) besides the sexual have indeed become a smaller part of my life than they used to be. The sexual drive will just have to die out with age, it seems.

Well my personnal opinion is that as much as a thinking animal as we are, it is still in our nature to be animals. I have been in contact with many animals, observed their group behaviours as well as those of humans with a very objective eye, and I've found this to be true, that most humans are exclusively instinct driven, not any less than any other animal.

I agree completely. And society is built around fortifying our basic instincts.

Far from allowing the masses to free themselves from their instincts' slavery, their ability for reflexion is mostly used to serve those instincts.

It is exactly why I say that the defining moment of freedom is in action, and not reflection. Too many people have been the theorists of their philosophy and not actual practitioners simply because it is so difficult to go against your nature.

I need to aknowledge them, for what they are, no more but no less.

When I say deny one's instinct I do not mean to disregard it. Obviously one needs to understand what it is, how it operates and why it does so.

However most can not, and do not even want to.

I believe it is in everyone's power to do so, under the proper conditioning. And it is not a question of will. It is logically imperative, if one must be free. One's motives, when under the influence of instinct are invalid in many ways. As is the drug abuser's motives, when under the influence. It is exactly because I desire to be the master of my own will, that I am under logical obligation to render my instinct obsolete.

Immortal Goat
Feb 11th, 2004, 07:22 AM
I like goats.

OMG, ARE YOU LIEK, HITTING ON ME? :love

Helm
Feb 11th, 2004, 07:31 AM
I gotta poop real bad.

theapportioner
Feb 11th, 2004, 11:58 AM
Good idea. Clean out that orifice before teh bum secks.