Difference between revisions of "Homosexuality" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[File:Lesbian married couple.jpg|thumb|240 px|Lesbian married couple at San Francisco Pride 2004.]]
  
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'''Homosexuality''' refers to [[human sexuality|sexual]] interaction between individuals of the same [[gender]]. The term "gay" is used predominantly to refer to self-identified homosexual people of either sex. "[[Lesbianism|Lesbian]]" is a gender-specific term that is only used for self-identified homosexual females. [[Bisexuality]] refers to individuals who are comfortable with both [[heterosexual]] and homosexual relationships.
  
'''Homosexuality''' refers to [[sexual attraction|sexual]] interaction and / or [[romantic love|romantic]] attraction between individuals of the same [[sex]]. In modern use, the [[adjective]] ''homosexual'' is used for [[intimate relationship]]s and/or [[human sexual behavior|sexual relations]] between people of the same sex, who may or may not identify themselves as [[gay]] or [[lesbian]]. Homosexuality, as an identifier, is usually contrasted with [[heterosexuality]] and [[bisexuality]]. The term ''gay'' is used predominantly to refer to self-identified homosexual people of either sex. ''Lesbian'' is a gender-specific term that is only used for self-identified homosexual [[female]]s.
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Homosexuality has been widely maligned as [[deviance|deviant]] or [[sin]]ful behavior in most cultures, attitudes stemming from religious and philosophical ideas about what behaviors are in accord with [[nature]] and [[natural law]]. On the other hand, many cultures throughout history have had specific socially sanctioned roles for erotic love and sexual expression between individuals of the same sex. Today attitudes towards homosexuality are changing from hostility to [[tolerance]], as efforts are made to combat homophobic prejudice, to end discrimination, and to ensure the [[civil rights]] of all people irrespective of their sexual orientation.  
  
Erotic love and sexual expression between individuals of the same sex has been a feature of most known cultures since earliest history (see [[#Homosexual relations through history|Homosexual relations through history]] below). However, it was not until the [[19th Century]] that such acts and relationships were seen as indicative of a type of person with a defined and relatively stable [[sexual orientation]]. The first recorded use of the word ''Homosexual'' was in 1869 by [[Karl-Maria Kertbeny]]<ref>{{Cite journal |quotes= |last=Feray |first=Jean-Claude |authorlink= |coauthors=Herzer, Manfred |others=trans. Glen W. Pepple |year=1990 |month= |title=Homosexual Studies and Politics in the 19th Century: Karl Maria Kertbeny |journal=Journal of Homosexuality |volume=19 |issue=1 |pages= |id= |url= |accessdate= }}</ref>, with [[Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing]]'s 1886 book ''[[Psychopathia Sexualis (book)|Psychopathia Sexualis]]'' popularizing the concept.
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Nevertheless, the topic has become one of great controversies of the twenty-first century. On the one hand, gay activists and many liberals regard homosexuality as an innate condition; they believe that homosexual behavior should be accepted as within the range of the diverse ways human beings express sexual love. They believe society should protect homosexuals as a civil rights issue. On the other side, many conservatives and religious people regard homosexuality as a deviant state and same-sex relations as outside the norm of what should be acceptable behavior. They regard homosexual behavior as a sin and believe society should treat it as a moral issue.  
  
In the years since [[Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing|Krafft-Ebing]], homosexuality has become a subject of considerable study and debate. Originally viewed as a [[pathology]] to be cured, it is now more often investigated as part of a larger project to understand the [[Biology and sexual orientation|biology]], [[psychology]], [[politics]], [[genetics]], [[history]] and cultural variations of sexual practice and identity. The [[Homosexuality laws of the world|legal and social status]] of people who perform homosexual acts or identify as [[gay]] or [[lesbian]] varies enormously across the world and remains hotly contested.
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The causes of homosexuality are as yet unclear, and may be a complex of many factors. Same-sex attraction can be a powerful force that neither religious teachings nor will-power can defeat. Mainstream [[psychology]] has come around to the view that homosexuality is an innate condition, although a dissenting minority regard it as a disorder and have developed specialized therapies that can enable those who are willing to deal with their same-sex attraction and settle into a heterosexual lifestyle.<ref name=Cohen>Richard Cohen, ''Coming Out Straight: Understanding and Healing Homosexuality'' (Winchester, VA: Oakhill Press, 2006, ISBN 1886939772).</ref>
  
==Etymology and usage==
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These days, most homosexuals at first struggle against but eventually choose to accept their proclivity for the same sex as a part of their [[identity]]. In so doing, they may have to overcome social and familial disapproval, religiously based guilt, and personal shame. Some decide to openly identify themselves as "gay"; others choose to remain "in the closet," in keeping with the discretion that most heterosexuals practice in concealing their sex lives.
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People whose value system is rooted in religion continue to see homosexual behavior, like all sexual behavior, as a [[morality|moral]] issue. Morality is rooted in the responsible use of one's freedom to refrain from acting on illicit sexual urges—whether heterosexual or homosexual. Some churches condemn the homosexual lifestyle by its most unsavory aspects, like sprees with many partners. However, their judgment would be hypocritical unless they were equally opposed to the promiscuous behavior that has become so commonplace and accepted among heterosexuals. A consistent biblically based standard is that sexual activity is only appropriate to (heterosexual) marriage. Churches that condemn homosexuals may justifiably do so because they uphold the [[marriage]] standard for all their members, and see accommodating the wishes of homosexuals as corrosive to morality generally.<ref>Hence their opposition to the campaign to legalize gay marriage.</ref> Other churches take the path of compassionate ministry: they include homosexuals as mandated by [[Jesus]]' call to minister to every lost sheep. They believe that God's grace is for all people whatever their sexual orientation, and see a homosexual not primarily as a homosexual but first as a human being made in the image of God.
  
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==Modern Prevalence of Homosexuality==
  
[[Image:Hyakinthos.jpg|thumb|left|''[[Anemoi#West wind|Zephyrus]] and [[Hyacinth (mythology)|Hyacinthus]]''<br/> [[Attica|Attic]] [[Red-figure pottery|red-figure]] cup from [[Tarquinia]], 480 B.C.E..E. ([[Boston Museum of Fine Arts]])]]
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Estimates of the modern prevalence of homosexuality vary considerably. They are complicated by differing or even ambiguous definitions of homosexuality, the stigma associated with homosexuality, frequent use of non-random samples, and by fluctuations over time and according to location.
  
The word ''homosexual'' is predominantly used as an adjective, describing behavior, relationships, people, etc.  Many object to its use as a noun. The adjectival form literally means “same sex,” being a [[Hybrid word|hybrid]] formed from the [[Greek language|Greek]] prefix ''homo&ndash;'', which means “same,and the Latin root ''sex&ndash;'', which means “sex” or "gender." Its first known appearance in print is found in an 1869 German pamphlet by the Austrian-born novelist [[Karl-Maria Kertbeny]], published anonymously. The prevalence of the concept owes much to the work of the German psychiatrist [[Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing]] and his 1886 work ''[[Psychopathia Sexualis (book)|Psychopathia Sexualis]]''. As such, the current use of the term has its roots in the broader 19th century tradition of personality taxonomy. These continue to influence the development of the modern concept of [[sexual orientation]], gaining associations with [[romantic love]] and [[Sexual identity|identity]] in addition to its original, exclusively sexual meaning.
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The controversial [[Alfred Kinsey#The Kinsey Reports|Kinsey Reports]] of 1948 found that 37 percent of males in the [[United States]] had had some sexual experience with other men, and that four percent had always been exclusively homosexual. Among women, Kinsey found between two percent and six percent had "more or less exclusively" homosexual experience. His results, however, have been disputed, and follow up studies claimed that much of Kinsey's work was based on [[sampling (statistics)|convenience sample]]s rather than [[random sample]]s, and thus would have been vulnerable to [[bias]].<ref>W.G. Cochran, F. Mosteller, and J.W. Tukey, ''Statistical Problems of the Kinsey Report on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male'' (Washington, DC: American Statistical Association, 1954).</ref> "His figures were undermined when it was revealed that he had disproportionately interviewed homosexuals and prisoners (many sex offenders)."<ref>Tom Bethell, "Kinsey as Pervert" ''American Spectator'' 38 (April 2005): 42-44.</ref><ref>Julia A. Ericksen, "With enough cases, why do you need statistics? Revisiting Kinsey's methodology" ''The Journal of Sex Research'' 35(2) (May 1998): 132-140.</ref>
  
The adjective ''homosexual'' can be used to describe individuals' sexual orientation, sexual history, or self-identification. Many people reject all usage of "homosexual" as too clinical and dehumanizing, as the word only refers to one's sexual behavior, and does not refer to non-sexual romantic feelings. As a result, the terms ''gay'' and ''lesbian'' are usually preferred when discussing a person of this [[sexual orientation]], whose sexual history is predominated by this behavior, or who identifies as such. The first letters are frequently combined to create the acronym [[LGBT]] (which is also written as GLBT), in which B and T refer to [[Bisexuality|bisexuals]] and [[transgender]] individuals.  A smaller number of same-sex oriented people personally prefer the adjective "homosexual" rather than "gay," as they may perceive the former as describing a sexual orientation and the latter as describing a cultural or socio-political group with which they do not identify.
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More modern and precise research by [[Edward O. Laumann]], reported in ''Sex in America: A definitive survey'' (1995), presented data on sexual practices and sexual relationships, number of partners, and the rate of homosexuality in the population. Homosexuality was reported to be 1.3 percent for women within the past year, and 4.1 percent since 18 years; for men, 2.7 percent within the past year, and 4.9 percent since 18 years.<ref>Robert T. Michael, John H. Gagnon, Edward O. Laumann, and Gina Kolata, ''Sex in America: A definitive survey'' (Boston, MA: Little Brown & Co, 1995, ISBN 0316075248).</ref>
  
Although early writers also used the adjective ''homosexual'' to refer to any single-gender context (such as an all-girls' school), today the term is used exclusively in reference to sexual attraction and activity. The term ''[[homosocial]]'' is now used to describe single-sex contexts that are not specifically sexual. There is also a word referring to same-sex love, ''[[homophilia]]''.
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==Contemporary Controversy over Homosexuality==
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Societal attitudes towards same-sex relationships, reflected in the attitude of the general population, the state and the church, have varied over the centuries, and from place to place. They have ranged from acceptance and even encouragement of pederastic relationships (as in [[Ancient Greece]]), to seeing the practice as a major sin deserving of repression through law enforcement and judicial mechanisms, even proscribing it under penalty of death.
  
New terms are arising for use in situations where specificity is important. For example, ''[[men who have sex with men]]'', or ''MSM'' for short, is sometimes used in the medical community when specifically discussing sexual behavior (regardless of sexual orientation or self-identification). ''[[Same-sex attraction]]'' focuses on spontaneous feeling, but de-emphasizes identification with a demographic or cultural group, and also leaves open the possibility for co-existing opposite-sex attraction. ''[[Homoeroticism|Homoerotic]]'' is a synonym for ''same-sex attraction'' that is used to refer both to personal feelings and works of art. ''Non-straight'' is another attempt at neutrality that is gaining currency. Some other terms are now becoming more prevalent, including ''[[Bi-curious|heteroflexible]]'' to refer to a person who identifies as heterosexual, but occasionally engages in same-sex sexual activities, or ''[[metrosexual]]'' to denote a straight man with stereotypically gay tastes in food, fashion and design.
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Today many people argue for social acceptance and legal recognition of same-sex relationships, believing that homosexuality is an inborn trait. This is the position of the American Psychiatric Association, which since 1973 has rejected the view that homosexuality is a mental disorder and has called for society to respect homosexual rights. Many others still maintain the traditional view that homosexuality is a sin, the result of a choice to indulge in immoral behavior. For most religious-minded people, same-sex relationships are incompatible with their beliefs and world view.  
  
A variety of negative terms also exist. Many of these, including words like [[queer]] and [[faggot (epithet)|faggot]], have been "reclaimed" as positive words by those against whom they were initially used.
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===Range of beliefs===
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Controversy over the issue of homosexuality became acute in the United States as the success of the [[Homosexuality#Gay Rights Movement|Gay Rights Movement]] brought with it social and legal pressures to tolerate and accept behavior that a majority of the population had traditionally regarded as sinful and/or deviant. To draw the issue sharply: Many believe that the root cause of homosexuality is genetic, like left-handedness. Therefore a homosexual cannot be held morally responsible for his or her sexual orientation, and cannot be expected to change it. Having subjected them to discrimination in the past, society should now treat homosexuals as a discriminated minority in need of legal protection and [[civil rights]], in the same manner as civil rights were guaranteed to [[African-Americans]].  
  
==Academic study==
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On the other side, those who reject this view regard homosexuality as a life-style in which same-sex attractions (which are common to numerous people) are acted upon instead of suppressed, and a homosexual as someone who has formed his or her identity from this attraction. The behavior is addictive and difficult to change. Even so, homosexual behavior is a moral issue, and those who identify themselves as homosexuals do not deserve any more protection than do alcoholics or smokers.
  
The manifestation of sexual orientation is subject to a considerable variability. Thus it is common for homosexual individuals in [[heteronormativity|heteronormative]] societies to love, marry, and have children with individuals of the opposite sex, a practice that may be done primarily for social reasons in societies which reject same-sex relations, as a cover for one's orientation (such relationships are known as "[[beard (female companion)|beards]]"). These adaptations are forms of [[situational sexual behavior]]. Also some people of either sex want to pass their genes on and have children.  Homosexual men or women may marry for that reason.  Lesbian women may want a child through [[artificial insemination]].
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There are a number of shades of opinion between these two viewpoints. Generally, young people side with the liberal viewpoint, which is promoted by gays themselves. It has the endorsement of most mental health professionals. Older people, and members of conservative religious groups including Christians, Muslims and Jews, tend to hold the conservative view.  
 
 
A further, and extremely common, manifestation of situational sexual behavior involving homosexual acts is seen in [[prison sexuality|prisons]] where individuals can only meet members of their own sex for long periods of time.
 
 
 
===Anthropology===
 
====Forms====
 
 
 
Numerous researchers studying the social construction of same-sex relationships have suggested that the concept of homosexuality would best be rendered as "homosexualities." They document that same-sex relations have been and continue to be organized in distinctly categorical ways by different societies in different eras. These variations are grouped by [[cultural anthropology|cultural anthropologist]] [[Stephen O. Murray]]<ref>''Homosexualities (Worlds of Desire: The Chicago Series on Sexuality, Gender, and Culture)'' (2002) p.2</ref> and others<ref>"Queering Anthropology" (published in Theo Sandfort e.a. (eds) ''Lesbian and Gay Studies'', London/NY, Routledge, 2000) [http://www2.fmg.uva.nl/gl/queerant.html]</ref> into (usually) three separate modes of association:
 
  
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
|-
!Association
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!Question<ref>[http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_fixe.htm Divergent beliefs about the nature of homosexuality]. ''Religioustolerance.org''. Retrieved January 21, 2021.</ref>
!Annotations
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!The most conservative view
!See also
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!The most liberal view
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|-
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|What homosexuality is
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|A chosen lifestyle, and an identity formed around it.
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|An innate orientation that one does not choose.
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|-
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|What causes it
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|Multiple causes including: poor parenting, sexual molestation during childhood, demon possession. Addiction traps them in the lifestyle.
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|Genetic causes plus unknown environmental factor in early childhood which "turns on" the gay gene(s).
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|-
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|At what age can it be detected
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|During the teenage years, after puberty, when it is chosen.
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|Same-sex orientation can be detected in pre-school children.
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|-
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|Is it a sin?
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|Yes, a most serious sin, endangering the family and social stability.
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|No, since there is no choice, there is no sin. Safe and consensual relationships are not inherently sinful.
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|-
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|Is it natural?
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|It is unnatural and deviant, violating the principle of male-female relationships found throughout nature.
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|It is normal and natural for a minority of humans, just as it is found in a minority of animals and birds of many species.
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|-
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|What should a homosexual do?
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|Choose to remain celibate or attempt to change their orientation to hetersexual through therapy.
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|Accept their sexual orientation and find a monogamous relationship with a same-sex partner. Attempting to change sexual orientation is impossible; therapies are futile and even dangerous.
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|-
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|God's attitude towards homosexuality
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|He loves the sinner but hates the sin. He loves homosexuals but homosexual behavior is always sinful.
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|He loves homosexuals as persons and approves of homosexual love if it is consensual and committed.
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|-
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|Can sexual preference be changed?
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|Yes, through counseling, reparative therapy and prayer. Yet requires great effort because it is so addictive.
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|No. Sexual orientation is fixed from birth. Therapy is ineffective and potentially dangerous, leading to depression and suicide.
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|-
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|Are anti-discrimination laws beneficial?
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|No. Granting special privileges to a group defined by their moral choice is wrong. It can encourage more youth to embrace homosexuality.
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|Yes. Homosexuals are a discriminated-against minority in need of protection.
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|-
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|What happens to children raised by gay or lesbian parents?
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|A large percentage will become homosexuals. Those who don't will be deeply disturbed by their parents' homosexual lifestyle.
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|The vast majority will be heterosexual, more tolerant and less judgmental than average.
 
|-
 
|-
|Egalitarian
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|Should same-sex couples be permitted to marry?
|features two partners with no relevance to age. Additionally, both play the same socially-accepted sex role as [[heterosexuality|heterosexuals]] of their own sex. This is exemplified by relationships currently prevalent in western society between partners of similar age and gender.
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|No. By changing the time-honored basis of marriage, permitting same-sex marriages threatens regular families and thus the stability of society.
|[[Sexuality and gender identity-based cultures]]
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|Yes. Official recognition of their relationship and government benefits that come with it are a fundamental civil right.
 
|-
 
|-
|Gender structured
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|Should churches recognize committed monogamous same-sex relationships?
|features each partner playing a different [[gender role]]. This is exemplified by traditional relations between men in the [[Mediterranean Basin]], the [[Middle East]] and [[Central Asia|Central]] and [[South Asia|South]] [[Asia]], as well as [[Two-Spirit]] or shamanic gender-changing practices seen in native societies. In North America, this is best represented by the [[butch and femme|butch/femme]] practice.
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|No. Gay relationships are an abomination, hated by God.
|[[Homosexuality and Islam]], [[Two-Spirit]], and [[Hijra (South Asia)|Hijra]]
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|Yes. All loving, committed adult relationships should be recognized and honored as God's gift of love.
 
|-
 
|-
|Age structured
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|Should gays be eligible for ordination as clergy?
|features partners of different ages, usually one adolescent and the other adult. This is exemplified by [[pederasty]] among the [[Hellenic civilization|Classical Greeks]] or those engaged in by novice [[samurai]] with more experienced warriors; southern Chinese boy-marriage rites; and ongoing Central Asian and Middle Eastern practices.
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|No. It would be a major lowering of standards and the condoning of sin.
|[[Shudo]], [[Pederasty]], [[Historical pederastic couples]], and [[Homosexuality in China]]
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|Yes. One's sexual orientation has no bearing on one's ability to be a priest or minister.
 
|}
 
|}
  
Gender-structured and age-structured homosexuality typically involve one partner adopting a "passive" and the other an "active" role to a much greater degree than in egalitarian relationships. Among men, being the passive partner often means receiving [[semen]], i.e. performing fellatio or being the receptive partner during [[anal sex]]. This is sometimes interpreted as an emphasis on the sexual pleasure of the active partner, although this is disputed. For example, in gender-structured female homosexuality in [[Thailand]], active partners (''toms'') emphasize the sexual pleasure of the passive partner (''dee''), and often refuse to allow their ''dee'' to pleasure them, while in ancient Greece the pederastic tradition was seen as engendering strong friendships between the partners, and was blamed for predisposing males to continue seeking the "passive" pleasures they experienced as adolescents even after they matured.
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===Gay Rights Movement===
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{{Main|Gay rights movement}}
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Although homosexual acts were decriminalized in some parts of the [[Western world]], such as in [[Denmark]] in 1933, in [[Sweden]] in 1944, in the [[United Kingdom]] in 1967, and in [[Canada]] in 1969, it was not until the mid-1970s that homosexuals first began to achieve actual, though limited, [[civil rights]] in [[developed countries]]. A turning point was reached in 1973 when, in a vote decided by a plurality of the membership, the [[American Psychiatric Association]] removed homosexuality from the [[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders]], thus negating its previous definition of homosexuality as a clinical [[mental disorder]]. In 1977, [[Quebec]] became the first state-level jurisdiction in the world to prohibit [[discrimination]] on the grounds of [[sexual orientation]].  
  
Some anthropologists have argued for the existence of a fourth type of homosexuality, [[social class|class]]-structured homosexuality, but many scholars believe that this has no independent existence from the other three types.
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Since the 1960s, in part due to their history of shared oppression, many gays and lesbians in the West, particularly those in major metropolitan areas, have developed a so-called "gay culture." To many, gay culture is exemplified by the [[gay pride]] movement, with annual parades and displays of rainbow flags. Yet not all gays choose to participate in such displays of "queer culture": some view it to be a frivolous display that perpetuates gay stereotypes and widens the gulf between gay and straight people.  
  
Usually in any society one form of homosexuality predominates, though others are likely to co-exist. As historian [[Rictor Norton]] points out in his [http://www.infopt.demon.co.uk/social19.htm ''Intergenerational and Egalitarian Models,''] in Ancient Greece egalitarian relationships co-existed (albeit less privileged) with the institution of [[pederasty]], and fascination with adolescents can also be found in modern sexuality, both heterosexual and homosexual. Egalitarian homosexuality is becoming the principal form practiced in the Western world, while age- and gender-structured homosexuality are becoming less common. As a byproduct of growing Western cultural dominance, this egalitarian homosexuality is spreading from western culture to non-Western societies, although there are still defined differences between the various cultures.
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The bewildering death toll wrought by [[AIDS]] epidemic in the early 1980s at first seemed to slow the progress of the [[gay rights]] movement, but in time it galvanized some parts of the gay community into community service and political action, and challenged the heterosexual community to respond compassionately. Many gay and lesbian groups and individuals organized campaigns to promote efforts in AIDS education, prevention, research, and patient support, and community outreach, as well as to demand government support for these programs. Gay Men's Health Crisis, Project Inform, and [[ACT UP]] are notable American examples of the gay community's response to the AIDS crisis. American [[motion picture]]s from this period dramatized the response of individuals and communities to the AIDS crisis, including ''An Early Frost'' (1985), ''Longtime Companion'' (1990), ''And the Band Played On'' (1993), ''Philadelphia'' (1993), and ''Common Threads:  Stories from the Quilt'' (1989), the last referring to the ''NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt'' last displayed in its entirety on the Mall in [[Washington, DC]] in 1996.
  
====Incidence====
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Today the Gay Rights Movement in the United States is highly organized and is working through the legal system and political process to secure complete civil rights for homosexuals in matters of employment, adoption, inheritance rights, up to and including gay marriage.
  
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===Gay marriage and civil unions===
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Legislation designed to create provisions for gay marriage in a number of countries has polarized international opinion and led to many well-publicized political debates and court battles. For moderate and conservative religious-minded people, the activism of the Gay Rights Movement in seeking [[civil rights]] for themselves up to the point of civil unions may be tolerable, but it becomes objectionable and even threatening when the legal changes they propose alter of the meaning and purpose of [[marriage]], which affects everyone. They maintain that marriage is a specific institution designed as the union of a man and a woman, as a foundation for [[parenthood]] and the establishment of a [[family]].
  
Estimates of the modern prevalence of homosexuality vary considerably. They are complicated by differing or even ambiguous definitions of homosexuality, and by fluctuations over time and according to location.
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By 2006, the [[Netherlands]], [[Belgium]], [[Spain]], [[Canada]], and [[South Africa]] had legalized [[same-sex marriage]]; in the [[United States]], only [[Massachusetts]] had legalized gay marriage while the states of [[Vermont]], [[Connecticut]], and [[New Jersey]] allowed [[civil union]]s.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4081999.stm Gay marriage around the globe] ''BBC News'', December 22, 2005. Retrieved January 21, 2021.</ref> [[Maine]], [[California]], and [[Hawaii]], as well as the [[District of Columbia]], offered [[domestic partnership]]s.
  
It is important to note, however, that these numbers are subject to many of the pitfalls inherent in researching sensitive social issues.  For example, because of the stigma associated with homosexuality, survey results will be biased downward by under-reporting. The frequent use of non-random samples in many studies could also serve to skew the data.
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By January 2021, same-sex marriage was legally performed and recognized in 29 countries, including the United States.<ref>Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in all fifty states and the District of Columbia, all territories except American Samoa, and in some tribal nations.</ref>
  
In general, most research agrees that the number of people who have had multiple same-gender sexual experiences is fewer than the number of people who have had a single such experience, and that the number of people who identify themselves as exclusively homosexual is fewer than the number of people who have had multiple homosexual experiences.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
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===Health and behavioral issues===
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Many homosexuals recognize the norm of a long-term relationship with one partner. Nevertheless, taken as a whole, the homosexual population includes a large percentage whose sexual behavior is aberrant by any standards. The health consequences of promiscuous homosexuality are tragic. In comparison to ordinary heterosexual lifestyles, homosexuals vary on a number of measures including the following:
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*The average homosexual male has 50 different partners in his lifetime, compared to six for the average heterosexual. These numbers are higher among those living in urban centers. The Kinsey Institute published a study of homosexual males living in [[San Francisco]] which reported that 43 percent had sex with 500 or more partners; 28 percent had sex with 1000 or more partners; and 79 percent said that over half of their sex partners were strangers.<ref name=Bell>Alan Bell and Martin Weinberg, ''Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women'' (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1978).</ref>
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*McWhirter and Mattison, both therapists who are homosexual, conducted a survey of 156 male couples. As reported in their book, ''The Male Couple,'' they found that 95 percent of the couples were unfaithful, and the five percent that were faithful had been together five or fewer years.<ref name=M&M>David McWhirter and Andrew Mattison, ''The Male Couple: How Relationships Develop'' (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1984, ISBN 0135475635).</ref> In contrast, surveys of heterosexual couples conducted in the 1990s show rates of infidelity ranging from four percent in a given year, 6.4 percent over a five-year period and 15-17 percent over the life of the marriage.<ref>Tom Smith, [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/237280997_American_Sexual_Behavior_Trends_Socio-Demographic_Differences_and_Risk_Behavior American Sexual Behavior: Trends, Socio-Demographic Differences, and Risk Behavior] University of Chicago, January 2003. Retrieved January 21. 2021.</ref> These results are opposite to the 95 percent of unfaithful homosexual couples. McWhirter and Mattison themselves stated, “The expectation for outside sexual activity was the rule for male couples and the exception for heterosexuals.”<ref name=M&M/>
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*Some homosexual sexual practices are inherently risky, notably anal sex. The skin inside the anus is highly susceptible to tearing, which can create openings for [[virus]]es and [[bacteria]] to enter the body.
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*A report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Task Force on Youth Suicide in 1989 revealed that one-third of all teenage [[suicide]]s are committed by those who suffer from homosexual problems. This is an extremely high percentage considering that only 1 to 3 percent of the population is homosexual. It was, however, noted that this increased risk of suicide might be attributable at least in part to a "hostile and condemning environment, verbal and physical abuse, rejection and isolation from family and peers".<ref>P. Gibson, "Gay and Lesbian Youth Suicide" in Marcia R. Fenleib (ed.), ''Report of the Secretary's Task Force on Youth Suicide'', (United States Government Printing Office, 1989, ISBN 0160025087).</ref> Homosexual men are six times more likely to have attempted suicide than heterosexual men.<ref name=Bell/>
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*The United States and several European countries require a deferral period of several months for men who have had sex with men from donating blood "because they are, as a group, at increased risk for HIV, hepatitis B and certain other infections that can be transmitted by transfusion."<ref>[https://www.fda.gov/vaccines-blood-biologics/blood-blood-products/revised-recommendations-reducing-risk-human-immunodeficiency-virus-transmission-blood-and-blood Revised Recommendations for Reducing the Risk of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission by Blood and Blood Products - Questions and Answersn] ''U.S. Food and Drug Administration'', February 2, 2021. Retrieved January 21, 2021.</ref>
  
The then controversial [[Kinsey Reports]] of 1948 found that 37% of males had had some sexual experience with other men, and that 4% had always been exclusively homosexual. Among women, Kinsey found between 2% and 6% had "more or less exclusively" homosexual experience.  
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The medical problems associated with homosexuality are well-known in the gay community. The Gay and Lesbian Medical Association warns gay men about the following:<ref>Robert J. Winn, [http://www.glma.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Page.viewPage&pageID=690 Ten Things Gay Men should Discuss with their Health Care Providers] ''Gay and Lesbian Medical Association GLMA'', May 2012. Retrieved January 21, 2021.</ref>
  
In the [[United States]] during the 2004 elections, exit polls indicated 4% of all voters self-identified as gay or lesbian. However, due to societal pressures, many who are homosexual may not be willing to identify as such.
+
#'''Come Out to your Healthcare Provider''': In order to provide you with the best care possible, your clinician should know you are gay.
 +
#'''HIV/[[AIDS]], Safe Sex''': That men who have sex with men are at an increased risk of HIV infection is well known, but the effectiveness of safe sex in reducing the rate of HIV infection is one of the gay community’s great success stories.
 +
#'''Hepatitis Immunization and Screening"'': Men who have sex with men are at an increased risk of sexually transmitted [[hepatitis]].
 +
#'''Fitness''' (Diet and Exercise): Problems with body image are more common among gay men than their straight counterparts. This results in a higher prevalence in gay men of eating disorders such as [[bulimia]] or [[anorexia nervosa]]. Others overdo exercise and abuse of substances such as anabolic steroids. At the opposite end of the spectrum, overweight and obesity are problems that also affect a large subset of the gay community.  
 +
#'''Substance Abuse/Alcohol''': Gay men abuse substances at a higher rate than the general population, and not just in larger cities.
 +
#'''Depression/Anxiety''': [[Depression (psychology)|Depression]] and [[anxiety]] appear to affect gay men at a higher rate than in the general population.
 +
#'''STDs''': [[Sexually transmitted diseases]] (STD)s occur in sexually active gay men at a high rate.
 +
#'''Prostate, Testicular, and Colon Cancer''': The cultural sensitivities of gay men may lead them not to avail themselves of recommended screenings, thus putting them at higher risk of death by [[prostate]], testicular, or [[colon]] [[cancer]].
 +
#'''Tobacco''': It appears that gay men use [[tobacco]] at much higher rates than straight men, reaching nearly 50 percent in several studies. Tobacco-related health problems include lung disease and lung cancer, heart disease, high blood pressure, and a whole host of other serious problems.
 +
#'''HPV (virus that causes warts and can lead to anal cancer)''': Of all the sexually transmitted infections gay men are at risk for, human papilloma virus (HPV)—which cause anal and genital warts—is often thought to be little more than an unsightly inconvenience. However, these infections may play a role in the increased rates of anal cancers in gay men.  
  
In [[Canada]], a 2003 report by Statistics Canada indicated that among Canadians aged 18 to 59, 1% reported that they are homosexual, and 0.7% reported to be bisexual. <ref>{{cite news
+
Yet many homosexuals ignore the widespread publicity of these medical risks within the gay community.
  | last =
 
  | first =
 
  | coauthors =
 
  | title =Canadian Community Health Survey
 
  | work =
 
  | pages =
 
  | language =
 
  | publisher =The Daily
 
  | date =June 15 2004
 
  | url =http://www.statcan.ca/Daily/English/040615/d040615b.htm
 
  | accessdate =2006-12-29 }}
 
</ref> At the same time, a [http://www.durex.com/cm/gss2005Content.asp?intQid=943&intMenuOpen= Global Sex Survey] by [[Durex]] for 2005 reports that 19% of Canadians claim to have had a homosexual experience, along with 20% of Americans.
 
  
In [[North Africa]], the [[Middle East]] and [[Central Asia]], where gender- or [[pederasty|age-structured]] relationships are the rule, homosexual practices among men are reported to be widespread, engaged in by many individuals who do not regard themselves as homosexual. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
+
===Gays in the military===
 +
In the close quarters of male barracks and under the pressure of combat, many in the military see the presence of homosexuals as potentially creating problems of troop cohesiveness, discipline and morale. “Don't ask, don't tell” (DADT) was the official [[United States]] policy on military service by gay men, bisexuals, and lesbians, instituted by the [[Bill Clinton|Clinton]] Administration. The policy, which required homosexual soldiers to conceal their orientation and refrain from homosexual behavior, was issued under Department of Defense Directive 1304.26 on December 21, 1993, and was in effect from February 28, 1994, until September 20, 2011.<ref>[https://biotech.law.lsu.edu/blaw/dodd/corres/html2/d130426x.htm Qualification Standards for Enlistment, Appointment, and Induction] ''Department of Defense'', December 21, 1993. Retrieved January 21, 2021.</ref> This imperfect compromise between open acceptance and prohibition was intended to enable homosexual men to serve their country honorably and without causing any disruption in the ranks. This policy was repealed in 2010, so that DADT was no longer policy as of September 20, 2011, allowing homosexuals to serve openly in the military.  
  
===Biology===
+
Several other countries, including the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[Netherlands]], also accept openly homosexual individuals into the armed forces. [[Islam]]ic nations that adhere to the strict interpretation of [[Sharia]] remove individuals from their armed forces who are believed to be homosexual and may subject them to legal penalties.
{{main|Biology and sexual orientation}}
 
====Prenatal hormonal theory====
 
  
The neurobiology of the masculinization of the brain is fairly well understood. Estradiol, and testosterone, which is catalyzed by the enzyme 5α-reductase into dihydrotestosterone, act upon androgen receptors in the brain to masculinize it. If there are few androgen receptors (people with [[Androgen insensitivity syndrome]]) or too much androgen (females with [[Congenital adrenal hyperplasia]]) there can be physical and psychological effects.<ref>Villain, E. (2000). Genetics of Sexual Development. Annual Review of Sex Research, 11</ref> It has been suggested that both male and female homosexuality are results of variation in this process.<ref>{{cite book
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==Homosexuality in World Cultures==
  | last =Wilson
+
Sexual customs have varied greatly over time and from one region to another. Modern Western gay culture, largely a product of the loosening of sexual restraints generally in the twentieth century and given widespread social sanction as a result of the contemporary [[Homosexuality#Gay Rights Movement|Gay Rights Movement]], is a relatively recent manifestation of same-sex desire. It is generally not applicable as a standard when investigating same-gender sex in other cultures and historical periods.
  | first =Glenn
 
  | coauthors =Qazi Rahman
 
  | title =Born Gay?: The Psychobiology of Sex Orientation
 
  | publisher =Peter Owen Publishers
 
  | date =2005
 
  | pages =200 pages
 
  | id =ISBN 0720612233
 
  | chapter =5. Hormones in the womb }}
 
</ref> In these studies lesbianism is typically linked with a higher amount of masculinization than is found in heterosexual females, though when dealing with male homosexuality there are results supporting both higher and lower degrees of masculinization than heterosexual males.
 
  
====Physiological differences in homosexual people====
+
===Africa===
Several recent studies, including pioneering work by neuroscientist [[Simon LeVay]], demonstrate that there are notable differences between the physiology of a heterosexual male and a homosexual male. These differences are primarily noted in the [[brain]], [[inner ear]] and [[Olfaction|olfactory]] sense. LeVay discovered in his [[double-blind]] experiment that the average size of the [[INAH 3|INAH-3]] in the brains of homosexual men was significantly smaller than the average size in heterosexual male brains.<ref>http://members.aol.com/slevay/hypothalamus.pdf</ref> Some people have interpreted this as showing that some people are born homosexual; however, in LeVay's own words:
+
Homosexual expression in sub-Saharan Africa was present that the time of European colonization and took a variety of forms, most often pederasty.<ref>Stephen O. Murray, [http://semgai.free.fr/doc_et_pdf/africa_A4.pdf Homosexuality in “Traditional” Sub-Saharan Africa and Contemporary SouthAfrica] ''Le Seminaire Gai''. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> Anthropologists Murray and Roscoe reported that certain women in [[Lesotho]] engaged in socially sanctioned "long term, erotic relationships" named ''motsoalle.''<ref>Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe (eds.), ''Boy-Wives and Female Husbands: Studies of African Homosexualities.'' (Palgrave Macmillan, 2001, ISBN 0312238290). </ref> These practices were more or less tolerated, until attitudes hardened after the coming of [[Christianity]].
  
{{quotation|It's important to stress what I didn't find. I did not prove that homosexuality was genetic, or find a genetic cause for being gay. I didn't show that gay men are born that way, the most common mistake people make in interpreting my work. Nor did I locate a gay center in the brain. INAH-3 is less likely to be the sole gay nucleus of the brain than a part of a chain of nuclei engaged in men and women's sexual behavior...Since I looked at adult brains we don't know if the differences I found were there at birth, or if they appeared later.<ref>D. Nimmons, "Sex and the brain," Discover [March 1994), 64-71</ref>|[[Simon LeVay]]|[[Discover (magazine)|Discover]], March 1994}}
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===Americas===
 +
[[Image:Catlin - Dance to the berdache2.jpg|thumb|250 px|right|''Dance to the Berdache''<br />Sac and Fox Nation ceremonial dance to celebrate the two-spirit person. [[George Catlin]] (1796-1872); Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC]]
 +
In [[Native Americans in the United States|North American Native]] society, the most common form of same-sex sexuality centers around the figure of the "[[two-spirit]]" individual or ''berdache.'' Such people seem to have been recognized by the majority of tribes, each of which had its particular term for the role. These individuals are often viewed as having two spirits occupying one body. Their dress is usually a mixture of traditionally male and traditionally female articles. They have distinct gender and social roles in their tribes. Typically the two-spirit individual was recognized early in life, given a choice by the parents to follow the path, and if the child accepted the role then raised in the appropriate manner, learning the customs of the chosen gender. Two-spirit individuals were commonly [[Shamanism|shamans]] and were revered as having powers beyond those of ordinary shamans.
  
LeVay's work has come under criticism for not taking into account the fact that all of the brains of homosexual men he studied were from homosexual men who had died of [[AIDS]], which was not equally true of the heterosexuals whose brains he studied. However, when comparisons were made of the [[INAH 3|INAH-3]] measurements in only the brains of those in each group who died from complications due to AIDS (albeit a small sample), similar size differences were found.  It should also be noted that, currently, no evidence has been found to suggest that HIV or the effects of AIDS would result in changes in INAH-3 size.
+
Most of these individuals had relationships with the same, opposite, or either sexes. Female-bodied two-spirits usually had sexual relations or marriages with only females.<ref>Sabine Lang, John L. Vantine (trans.), ''Men as women, women as men: Changing gender in Native American cultures'' (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1998, ISBN 0292747012), 289-298. </ref> Male two-spirit people were often prized as wives because of their greater strength and ability to work. In the [[Lakota]] tribe, two-spirits commonly married widowers; in this function they parented their husband's children without any risk of bearing new children that she might give priority to.<ref>Raven Kaldera, ''Hermaphrodeities The Transgender Spirituality Workbook'' (Hubbardston, MA: Asphodel Press, 2009, ISBN 0578007916), 44.</ref>
  
To date, no analogous result has been found in women's brains.
+
[[Image:Balboamurder.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Balboa setting his war dogs upon Indian practitioners of male love in 1513; New York Public Library]]
 +
The Spanish conquerors were horrified to discover [[sodomy]] openly practiced among native peoples, and attempted to crush it out by subjecting the ''berdaches'' under their rule to severe penalties, including public execution and burning. In a famous example of homophobic cruelty, in 1513 the [[conquistador]] [[Vasco Nunez de Balboa]]: <blockquote>discovered that the village of Quarequa (in modern-day [[Panama]]) was stained by the foulest vice. The king’s brother and a number of other courtiers were dressed as women, and according to the accounts of the neighbors shared the same passion. Vasco ordered forty of them to be torn to pieces by dogs. The Spaniards commonly used their dogs in fighting against these naked people, and the dogs threw themselves upon them as though they were wild boars on timid deer.<ref>Alexandre Coello de la Rosa, [https://www1.udel.edu/LAS/Vol3-2Coello.html “Good Indians”, “Bad Indians”, “What Christians?”: The Dark Side of the New World in Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés (1478-1557)] ''Delaware Review of Latin American Studies'' 3(2) (2002). Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref></blockquote>
  
Some recent studies have tied a correlation between the number of older brothers a man has and his likelihood of being homosexual<ref name="blan">{{cite journal
+
===East Asia===
  | last =Blanchard
+
[[Image:Woman spying on male lovers.jpg|thumb|225px|right|A woman spying on a pair of male lovers, [[Qing Dynasty]]. Chinese Sexual Culture Museum in [[Shanghai]].]]
  | first =Ray
+
In [[Asia]] same-sex love has been known since the dawn of history. Early Western travelers were taken aback by its widespread acceptance and open display.
  | authorlink =
 
  | coauthors =Philip Klassen
 
  | title =H-Y Antigen and Homosexuality in Men
 
  | journal =Journal of Theoretical Biology
 
  | volume =185
 
  | issue =3
 
  | pages =373-378
 
  | publisher =
 
  | date =7 April 1997
 
  | url =http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=GatewayURL&_method=citationSearch&_uoikey=B6WMD-45KKS7X-72&_origin=SDEMFRHTML&_version=1&md5=c912434177f9c49f7755d3529ec345c5
 
  | doi =
 
  | id =
 
  | accessdate =  }}</ref> reported that each older brother increases the odds of being gay by 33%. This is now "one of the most reliable epidemiological variables ever identified in the study of sexual orientation."<ref>Blanchard and Klassen (1997); ''Birth order and sibling sex ratio in homosexual versus heterosexual males and females''. Review of Sex Research, Vol. 8</ref> To explain this finding, it has been proposed that male fetuses provoke a maternal immune reaction that becomes stronger with each successive male fetus.<ref name="blan" />  Male fetuses produce H-Y antigens which are "almost certainly" involved in the sexual differentiation of vertebrates <ref name="blan" />. It is this antigen which maternal H-Y antibodies are proposed to both react to and 'remember.' Successive male fetuses are then attacked by H-Y antibodies which somehow decrease the ability of H-Y antigens to perform their usual function in brain masculinization. This is now known as the fraternal birth order effect. In a study comparing the effects of being raised with older "brothers" and having biological older brothers, published July 26, 2006 in PNAS, Bogaert found that there was a link to homosexuality only if the older brothers were biologically related and even when they were not raised together.<ref>[http://www.reutershealth.com/archive/2006/06/26/eline/links/20060626elin022.html Reutershealth.com reference]</ref>  Interestingly, this relation seems to hold only for right-handed males.<ref>[http://members.aol.com/slevay/page22.html#_Birth_order The Biology of Sexual Orientation]</ref> There has been no observable equivalent for women.
 
  
====Homosexual behavior in animals====
+
Homosexuality in [[China]], known as the "pleasures of the bitten peach," "the cut sleeve," or "the southern custom," has been recorded since approximately 600 B.C.E. These euphemistic terms were used to describe behaviors, but not identities. In more recent times, the Chinese society adopted the term "brokeback," 斷背 ''duanbei,'' due to the success of Chinese director [[Ang Lee]]'s film ''Brokeback Mountain.'' In the past, such relationships were marked by differences in age and social position. However, the instances of same-sex affection and sexual interactions described in the ''[[Cao Xueqin|Hong Lou Meng]]'' (''Dream of the Red Chamber,'' or ''Story of the Stone'') seem as familiar to observers in the present as do equivalent stories of romances between heterosexuals during the same period.
  
 +
Homosexuality in [[Japan]], variously known as ''[[shudo]]'' or ''[[nanshoku]],'' terms influenced by [[Chinese literature]], has been documented for over one thousand years. This same-sex love culture gave rise to strong traditions of [[painting]] and [[literature]] documenting and celebrating such relationships.
  
Homosexual behavior does occur in the [[animal]] kingdom, especially in social species, particularly in marine birds and mammals, monkeys and the [[Hominidae|great apes]]. Homosexual behavior has been observed among 1,500 species, and in 500 of those it is well documented.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6066606.stm |title=Oslo gay animal show draws crowds |accessdate=2006-10-19 |date=October 19, 2006|work=BBC News}}</ref> [[Georgetown University]] professor [[Janet Mann]] has specifically theorized that homosexual behavior, at least in [[dolphin]]s, is an evolutionary advantage that minimizes intraspecies aggression, especially among males. 
+
In [[Thailand]], ''[[Kathoey]],'' or "ladyboys," have been a feature of Thai society for many centuries, and Thai kings had male as well as female lovers. ''Kathoey'' are men who dress as women. They are generally accepted by society, and Thailand has never had legal prohibitions against homosexuality or homosexual behavior. Thai [[Buddhism]] recognized the existence of this third gender.
*Male [[penguin]] couples have been documented to mate for life, build nests together, and to use a stone as a [[surrogate]] egg in nesting and brooding. In 2004, the [[Central Park Zoo]] in the [[United States]] replaced one male couple's stone with a fertile egg, which the couple then raised as their own offspring.<ref>[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/02/07/MNG3N4RAV41.DTL "Central Park Zoo's gay penguins ignite debate"] by Dinitia Smith, ''San Francisco Chronicle'', February 7, 2004</ref> German and Japanese zoos have also reported homosexual behavior among their penguins. This phenomenon has also been reported at Kelly Tarlton's Aquarium in [[Auckland]], [[New Zealand]].
 
*Courtship, mounting, and full [[anal sex|anal penetration]] between bulls has been noted to occur among [[American Bison]]. The [[Mandan]] nation Okipa festival concludes with a ceremonial enactment of this behavior, to "ensure the return of the buffalo in the coming season." {{Fact|date=February 2007}}<!-- is this source good enough http://www.wholeearthmag.com/ArticleBin/338.html apparently it was the source originally used by this article —> Also, mounting of one female by another is common among cattle. (''See also, [[Freemartin]]. Freemartins occur because of clearly causal hormonal factors at work during gestation''.)
 
*Homosexual behavior in male sheep (found in 6-10% of rams) is associated with variations in cerebral mass distribution and chemical activity. A study reported in ''[[Endocrinology (journal)|Endocrinology]]'' concluded that biological and physiological factors are in effect.<ref>[http://endo.endojournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/145/2/478 "The Volume of a Sexually Dimorphic Nucleus in the Ovine Medial Preoptic Area/Anterior Hypothalamus Varies with Sexual Partner Preference"] by Charles E. Roselli, et al., The Endocrine Society, October 2, 2003</ref> These findings are similar to human findings studied by [[Simon LeVay]].
 
*Male bighorn sheep are divisible into two kinds, the typical males among whom homosexual behavior is common and "effeminate sheep" or "behavioral transvestites" which are not known to engage in homosexual behavior.<ref>{{cite news
 
  | last =Drabelle
 
  | first =Dennis
 
  | title =In BriefRams Will Be Rams
 
  | work =
 
  | publisher =The Washington Post
 
  | date =July 4 2004
 
  | url =http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A22107-2004Jul1?language=printer
 
  | accessdate =2006-12-29 }}</ref><ref>
 
{{cite news
 
  | last =Moser
 
  | first =Bob
 
  | title =On the Originality of Species
 
  | work =
 
  | publisher =Stanford Magazine
 
  | date =May 2004
 
  | url =http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2004/mayjun/features/roughgarden.html
 
  | accessdate =2006-12-29
 
  | quote =Biologist Joan Roughgarden has studied nature’s ‘exceptions’ and thinks the rule needs to change. That means challenging Darwin on sex.}}</ref>
 
  
===Psychology===
+
===Europe===
====Behavioral Studies====
+
[[File:Kiss Briseis Painter Louvre G278.jpg|thumb|right|225 px| Erastes (lover) and eromenos (beloved) kissing. Detail from the tondo of a red-figure Attic cup, ca. 480 B.C.E. Paris, Musée du Louvre.]]
 +
[[Ancient Greece|Ancient Greek]] art, mythology, and philosophic works depict a society in which relationships between adult men and [[adolescence|adolescent]] youths were often valued for their pedagogic benefits and as a means of population control, although they were occasionally blamed for causing disorder. Generally these relationships were seen as part of a young man's education before he became an adult, took a wife and formed a heterosexual family. [[Plato]] praised the benefits of pederasty in his early writings, but later rejected its erotic character in favor of chaste relationships, what became known as [[Platonic love]].
  
 +
Socially sanctioned man-boy love continued in the [[Roman Empire]] until the coming of [[Christianity]]. Emperor [[Theodosius I]] decreed a law in 390 C.E. condemning passive homosexuals to be burned at the stake. However, [[tax]]es on [[brothel]]s of boys available for homosexual sex continued to be collected until the end of the reign of [[Anastasius I (emperor)|Anastasius I]] in 518. [[Justinian I|Justinian]], towards the end of his reign, expanded the proscription to the active partner as well (in 558) warning that such conduct can lead to the destruction of cities through the "wrath of God."
  
At the beginning of the 20th century, early theoretical discussions in the field of [[psychoanalysis]] posited original [[bisexuality]] in human psychological development. Quantitative studies by [[Alfred Kinsey]] in the 1940s and [[Fritz Klein|Dr. Fritz Klein]]'s sexual orientation grid in the 1980s find distributions similar to those postulated by their predecessors.
+
Accusations of homosexuality have at times been used as a political weapon. For example, during the early fourteenth century, accusations of homosexual behavior were instrumental in disbanding the [[Templars|Knights Templar]] under [[Philip IV of France]], who profited greatly from confiscating the Templars' wealth.  
  
Many modern studies, most notably ''Sexual Behavior in the Human Male'' <ref>Alfred C. Kinsey, ''Sexual Behavior in the Human Male'', 1948, ISBN 0-7216-5445-2(o.p.), ISBN 0-253-33412-8(reprint).</ref> and ''Sexual Behavior in the Human Female'' <ref>Alfred C. Kinsey, ''Sexual Behavior in the Human Female'', 1953, ISBN 0-7216-5450-9(o.p.), ISBN 0-671-78615-6(o.p. pbk.), ISBN 0-253-33411-X(reprint).</ref> by [[Alfred Kinsey]], have found that the majority of humans have had homosexual experiences or sensations and are bisexual. Contemporary scientific research suggests that the majority of the human population is bisexual, adhering to a fluid sexual scale rather than a category, as Western society typically views sexual nature. The [[Kinsey Reports]] found that approximately [http://www.indiana.edu/~kinsey/publications/duberman.html four percent] of adult Americans were exclusively homosexual for their entire lives, and approximately 10 percent were homosexual in their behavior for some portion of their lives. Conversely, an even smaller minority of people appear to have had equal sexual experiences with both genders indicating an attraction scale or continuum. However, social pressures influence people to adhere to categories or labels rather than behave in a manner that more closely resembles their nature as suggested by this research.
+
During the [[Renaissance]], rich cities in northern [[Italy]], [[Florence]] and [[Venice]] in particular, were renowned for their widespread practice of same-sex love, engaged in by a considerable part of the male (elite) population and constructed along the classical pattern of [[Ancient Greece]] and [[Roman Empire|Rome]].<ref>Michael Rocke, ''Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and male Culture in Renaissance Florence'' (Oxford University Press, USA, 1996, ISBN 0195122925).</ref> <ref>Guido Ruggiero, ''The Boundaries of Eros: Sex Crime and Sexuality in Renaissance Venice'' (Oxford University Press, 1989, ISBN 0195034651).</ref> The eclipse of this period of relative artistic and erotic freedom was precipitated by the rise to power of the moralizing monk [[Girolamo Savonarola]]. In northern Europe the artistic discourse on [[sodomy]] was turned against its proponents by artists such as [[Rembrandt]], who in his ''[[Rape of Ganymede]]'' no longer depicted [[Ganymede (mythology)|Ganymede]] as a willing youth, but as a squalling baby attacked by a rapacious bird of prey.  
  
Kinsey himself, along with current [[Queer Theory|LGBT activist]] groups, focus on the historicity and fluidity of sexual orientation. Kinsey's studies consistently found sexual orientation to be something that evolves in many directions over a person's lifetime, not necessarily including forming attractions to a new gender. Rarely do individuals radically reorient their sexualities rapidly — and still less do they do so volitionally — but often sexualities expand, shift, and absorb new elements over decades. For example, socially normative "age-appropriate" sexuality requires a shifting object of attraction (especially in the passage through adolescence). Contemporary [[queer theory]], incorporating many ideas from [[social constructionism]], tends to look at sexuality as something that has meaning only within a given historical framework. Sexuality, then, is seen as a participation in a larger social discourse, and, though in some sense fluid, not as something strictly determinable by the individual.
+
In the twentieth century, tens of thousands of homosexuals were murdered in the [[Holocaust]], based upon the [[Nazi]] proposition that they were a risk of contamination to the "Aryan race."
  
Most sexual orientation specialists follow the general conclusion of Alfred Kinsey regarding the sexual continuum, according to which a minority of humans are exclusively homosexual or [[heterosexuality|heterosexual]], and that the majority are [[bisexuality|bisexual]] {{Fact|date=February 2007}}. The consensus of psychologists is that sexual orientation, in most individuals, is shaped at an early age; and is not voluntarily changeable.
+
===Middle East and Central Asia===
 +
[[Image:Samarkand A group of musicians playing for a bacha dancing boy.jpg|thumb|225 px|right|''Dance of a [[bacchá]] (dancing boy)''<br/> [[Samarkand]], (ca. 1905 - 1915), photo [[Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii]]. [[Library of Congress]], Washington, DC.]]
 +
Among many [[Middle East|Middle-Eastern]] [[Muslim]] cultures, homosexual practices were widespread and public. [[Persia]]n poets, such as [[Attar]] (d. 1220), [[Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi|Rumi]] (d. 1273), [[Saadi|Sa’di]] (d. 1291), [[Hafez]] (d. 1389), and [[Jami]] (d. 1492), wrote poems replete with homo-erotic allusions. The two most commonly documented forms were commercial sex with [[transgender]] males or males enacting transgender roles exemplified by the ''köçek'' and the ''bacchá,'' and certain [[Sufism|Sufi]] spiritual practices.
  
Other studies have disputed Kinsey's methodology and have suggested that these reports overstated the occurrence of bisexuality and homosexuality in human populations. "His figures were undermined when it was revealed that he had disproportionately interviewed homosexuals and prisoners (many sex offenders)."<ref>Tom Bethell (April 2005). "Kinsey as Pervert".</cite> ''American Spectator'', '''38''', 42-44. ISSN 0148-8414.</ref> <ref>Julia A. Ericksen (May 1998). "With enough cases, why do you need statistics? Revisiting Kinsey's methodology".</cite> ''The Journal of Sex Research'' '''35''' (2): 132-40, ISSN 0022-4499.</ref>
+
In [[Persia]], homosexuality and homo-erotic expressions were tolerated in numerous public places, from monasteries and seminaries to taverns, military camps, bathhouses, and coffee houses. In the early [[Safavids|Safavid]] era (1501-1723), male houses of [[prostitution]] ''(amrad khane)'' were legally recognized and paid [[taxes]].
  
However, Kinsey's idea of a sexuality continuum still enjoys acceptance today and is supported by findings in the human and [[animal kingdom]]s including biological studies of structural brain differences between those belonging to different sexual orientations.
+
A rich tradition of art and literature sprang up, constructing Middle Eastern homosexuality in ways analogous to the ancient tradition of male love in which [[Ganymede (mythology)|Ganymede]], cup-bearer to the gods, symbolized the ideal boyfriend. Muslim&mdash;often [[Sufi]]&mdash;poets in medieval [[Arab]] lands and in Persia wrote odes to the beautiful Christian wine boys who, they claimed, served them in the taverns and shared their beds at night. In many areas the practice survived into modern times (as documented by [[Richard Francis Burton]], [[André Gide]], and others).
  
More modern and precise research ''Sex in America: A definitive survey'' (1995) is now available from NORC and the University of Chicago by [[Edward O. Laumann]], [[University of Chicago]]. "Results reported from the study, and included in ''The Social Organization of Sexuality'', include those related to sexual practices and sexual relationships, number of partners, the rate of homosexuality in the population (which the study reported to be 1.3% for women within the past year, and 4.1% since 18 years; for men, 2.7% within the past year, and 4.9% since 18 years).
+
In [[Central Asia]], on the [[Silk Road|Silk Route]], the two traditions of the East and the West met, and gave rise to a strong local culture of same-sex love. In the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]-speaking areas, one manifestation of this involved the ''bacchá,'' adolescent or adolescent-seeming male entertainers and sex workers.
  
Sexologists have attributed discrepancies in some findings to negative societal attitudes towards a particular sexual orientation. For example, people may state different sexual orientations depending on whether their immediate social environment is public or private. Reluctance to disclose one's actual sexual orientation is often referred to as "being in the closet." Individuals capable of enjoyable sexual relations with both sexes may feel inclined to restrict themselves to heterosexual or homosexual relations in societies that stigmatize same-sex or opposite-sex relations.
+
===South Pacific===
 +
Same-sex relationships were an integral part of the culture of many [[Melanesia]]n societies before the introduction of [[Christianity]]. Traditional Melanesian insemination rituals existed where a boy, upon reaching a certain age would be paired with an older adolescent who would become his mentor and whom he would ritually fellate over a number of years in order to develop his own masculinity. In certain tribes of [[Papua New Guinea]], it is considered a normal ritual responsibility for a boy to have a relationship in order to accomplish his ascent into manhood. Most of these practices have since died out.
  
Although the concept of three basic sexual orientations is widely recognized, a small minority maintain that there are other legitimate sexual orientations besides homosexuality, bisexuality and heterosexuality. These may include significant or exclusive orientation towards a particular type of transsexual or transgender individual (e.g. female-to-male transsexual men), intersexed individuals, or those who identify as non-gendered or other-gendered.
+
===Cultural anthropology===
 +
Researchers studying the social construction of same-sex relationships in the various cultures around the world have suggested that the concept of homosexuality would best be rendered as "homosexualities." They document that same-sex relations have been, and continue to be, organized in distinct categories by different societies in different eras. These variations are grouped by [[cultural anthropology|cultural anthropologist]] [[Stephen O. Murray]]<ref>Stephen O. Murray, ''Homosexualities (Worlds of Desire: The Chicago Series on Sexuality, Gender, and Culture)'' (University Of Chicago Press, 2002, ISBN 0226551954), 2.</ref> and others<ref> Theo Sandfort, Judith Schuyf, Jan Willem Duyvendak (eds.), ''Lesbian and Gay Studies: An Introductory, Interdisciplinary Approach'' (SAGE Publications Ltd, 2000, ISBN 978-0761954187). </ref> into (usually) three separate modes of association:
  
=====Father-son Relationships and Male Sexual Development=====
+
{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-
 +
!Association
 +
!Description
 +
|-
 +
|Egalitarian
 +
|features two partners with no relevance to age. Additionally, both play the same socially-accepted sex role as [[heterosexuality|heterosexuals]] of their own sex. This is exemplified by relationships currently prevalent in western society between partners of similar age and gender.
 +
|-
 +
|Gender structured
 +
|features each partner playing a different [[gender role]]. This is exemplified by traditional relations between men in the [[Mediterranean Basin]], the [[Middle East]] and [[Central Asia|Central]] and [[South Asia|South]] [[Asia]], as well as [[Two-Spirit]] or shamanic gender-changing practices seen in native societies. In North America, this is best represented by the [[butch and femme|butch/femme]] practice.
 +
|-
 +
|Age structured
 +
|features partners of different ages, usually one adolescent and the other adult. This is exemplified by [[pederasty]] among the [[Hellenic civilization|Classical Greeks]]; southern Chinese boy-marriage rites; and Central Asian and Middle Eastern practices.
 +
|}
  
Investigation into parent-child relations of homosexual and heterosexual men is heavily documented in research literature, and a link between the absence of sufficient bonding with same-sex parent or role models and the development of adult male homosexuality has been proposed. Numerous studies have found that adult homosexual males tend to report having had less loving and more rejecting fathers than their heterosexual peers (Bell, Weinberg, & Parks, 1981; Bieber et al., 1962; Braatan & Darling, 1965; Brown, 1963; Evans, 1969; Jonas, 1944; Millic & Crowne, 1986; Nicolosi, 1991; Phelan, 1993; Saghir & Robins, 1973; Siegelman, 1974; Snortum, 1969; [[Charles Socarides|Socarides]], 1978; West, 1959).
+
Gender-structured and age-structured homosexuality typically involve one partner adopting a "passive" and the other an "active" role to a much greater degree than in egalitarian relationships. Among men, being the passive partner often means receiving [[semen]], by performing fellatio or being the receptive partner during [[anal sex]]. This is sometimes interpreted as an emphasis on the sexual pleasure of the active partner, although this is disputed. For example, in gender-structured female homosexuality in [[Thailand]], active partners ''(toms)'' emphasize the sexual pleasure of the passive partner ''(dee),'' and often refuse to allow their ''dee'' to pleasure them, while in ancient Greece the pederastic tradition was seen as engendering strong friendships between the partners, and was blamed for predisposing males to continue seeking the "passive" pleasures they experienced as adolescents even after they matured.
  
Bieber (1976) stated:
+
Usually in any society one form of homosexuality predominates, though others are likely to co-exist. As historian [[Rictor Norton]] says in Ancient Greece egalitarian relationships co-existed (albeit less privileged) with the institution of [[pederasty]], and sexual fascination with adolescents can also be found among modern homosexuals. Egalitarian homosexuality has emerged as the principal form practiced in the Western world, while age- and gender-structured homosexuality have become less common. As a byproduct of growing Western cultural dominance, this egalitarian homosexuality is spreading from western culture to non-Western societies, although there are still defined differences between the various cultures.
  
{{quotation|Since 1962 when our volume was published, I have interviewed about 1,000 male homosexuals and 50 pairs of parents of homosexuals. The classic pattern was present in more than 90% of cases. In my entire experience, I have never interviewed a single male homosexual who had a constructive, loving father. A son who has a loving father who respects him does not become a homosexual. I have concluded that there is a causal relationship between parental influence and sexual choice|p. 368}}
+
==Causes of Homosexuality: Nature versus Nurture==
 +
A hotly debated topic among biologists, psychologists and anthropologists concerns the causes of homosexuality. The current debate is whether homosexuality is the result of nature—a person's biology and genetics, or of nurture—a person's environment and surroundings. Much about human sexuality remains unknown, and the debate continues to this day without any conclusive resolution. Most likely there are both innate and environmental factors at work.<ref>Ryan D. Johnson, Homosexuality: Nature or Nurture ''AllPsych'', April 30, 2003.</ref>
  
Bieber (1976) later expanded and clarified his earlier findings by saying:
+
This debate is inevitably tied to the [[morality|moral]] issue. Many believe that prejudice against gays and lesbians will melt away if the public were to accept the belief that a person's sexual orientation is mainly determined by genes. If genetic, then same-sex orientation is not a choice but something beyond one's control. Moreover, belief that homosexuality is determined by nature predisposes homosexuals to accept their sexual orientation as natural and to live a homosexual lifestyle; furthermore it fosters the belief that they cannot change and live as a heterosexual even if they want to. On the other hand, some homosexuals fear the development of a genetic "cure."
  
{{quotation|We have repeatedly stated and written that a boy whose father is warmly related and constructive will not become homosexual; however, one must not get trapped by the fallacy of the converse, that is, a hostile, destructive father always produces a homosexual son}}
+
If homosexuality is primarily fostered by the environment, e.g., family upbringing, molestation as a child, or affiliation with a youth sub-culture, then homosexual individuals can change their orientation, either through [[therapy]] or by suppressing same-sex attraction and taking on a heterosexual lifestyle. Indeed, they have a moral obligation to do so, in order to reject behavior that is sinful and unhealthy, and find fulfillment in the normative structure of the monogamous heterosexual family. The power of belief to shape an individual's identity would argue that accepting the view that one's homosexuality is genetically determined means to participate in a particular social construction in which that identity becomes permanent.
  
These reports have been criticized, particularly for confusing cause and effect. In other words, any tendency for gay males to bond more with their mothers than their fathers is more likely the result of homosexuality than the cause. The American Psychological Association has also criticized such reports, noting that the percentage of homosexual people is relatively constant across cultures, which is not what one would expect if parental influence were significant. The theory also fails to explain why homosexual acts were accepted among males in ancient Greece, pre-modern Japan, and other cultures, or why animals exhibit homosexuality. Animal biological research is beginning to parallel human research in its findings, particularly those species such as the Black Swans of Australia, where a male same-sex couple are the only parents of the brood. The study of homosexual rams (Roselli et al. 2004 cited in LeVay, 2006)<ref>http://members.aol.com/slevay/page22.html</ref> revealed that in homosexual rams, the analogous brain structure indicated to be involved in human homosexuality showed similar size differences to those in humans.
+
===Nature===
 +
Much research on the biology of homosexuality has sought to demonstrate an innate biological and even a genetic basis for this sexual orientation. To date the results have been equivocal.
  
===Nature versus nurture===
+
====Physiological differences====
 +
Several studies, including pioneering work by [[neuroscience|neuroscientist]] [[Simon LeVay]], have demonstrated that there are notable differences between the physiology of a heterosexual male and a homosexual male. These differences are primarily found in the [[brain]], [[inner ear]], and [[Olfaction|olfactory]] sense. LeVay discovered in his [[double-blind]] experiment that the average size of the [[INAH 3|INAH-3]] in the brains of homosexual men was significantly smaller than the average size in heterosexual male brains.<ref>Simon LeVay, ''The Sexual Brain'' (MIT Press, 1993, ISBN 0262620936). </ref>
  
 +
This study has come under criticism for not taking into account the fact that all of the brains of homosexual men he studied were from men who had died of [[AIDS]], which was not equally true of the heterosexuals whose brains he studied. Therefore, rather than looking at the cause of homosexuality, he may have been observing the effects of HIV/AIDS. Still, similar size differences were found when comparisons were made of the [[INAH 3|INAH-3]] measurements in only the brains of those in each group who died from complications due to AIDS, although that sample group was too small to be definitive. Moreover, currently no evidence has been found to suggest that HIV or the effects of AIDS would result in changes in INAH-3 size.
  
Considerable debate exists over whether predominantly biological or psychological factors produce sexual orientation in humans. Candidate factors include [[Biology and sexual orientation#Empirical studies|genes]] and the exposure of fetuses to certain [[Biology and sexual orientation#Early fixation hypothesis|hormones]] (or lack thereof). Historically, Freud and many others psychologists, particularly in psychoanalytic or developmental traditions, speculated that formative childhood experiences helped produce sexual orientation; as an example Freud believed that all human teenagers are predominantly homosexual and transition to heterosexuality in adulthood; those who remain homosexual as adults he believed had experienced some traumatic event that arrested their sexual development; however, he did believe all adults, even those who had healthy sexual development still retained latent homosexuality to varying degrees. Although there is currently no general medical consensus, one theory is that biological factors — whether genetic or acquired ''in utero'' — produce characteristically homosexual childhood experiences (such as atypical gender behavior experiences), or at the least significantly contribute to them.
+
Some people have interpreted LeVay's work as showing that some people are born homosexual; however, in LeVay's own words:
 +
<blockquote>It's important to stress what I didn't find. I did not prove that homosexuality was genetic, or find a genetic cause for being gay. I didn't show that gay men are born that way, the most common mistake people make in interpreting my work. Nor did I locate a gay center in the brain. INAH-3 is less likely to be the sole gay nucleus of the brain than a part of a chain of nuclei engaged in men and women's sexual behavior…. Since I looked at adult brains we don't know if the differences I found were there at birth, or if they appeared later.<ref> David Nimmons, [https://www.discovermagazine.com/mind/sex-and-the-brain Sex and the Brain] ''Discover'', March 1, 1994. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> </blockquote>
  
===Critique of studies===
+
====Homosexual behavior in animals====
The studies performed in order to find the origin of sexual orientation have been criticized for being too limited in scope, mostly for focusing only on heterosexuality and homosexuality as two diametrically opposite poles with no orientation in between.
+
Homosexual behavior has been observed in the [[animal]] kingdom, especially in social species, particularly marine birds and mammals.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6066606.stm Oslo gay animal show draws crowds] ''BBC News'', October 19, 2006. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
 +
*Male [[penguin]] couples have been documented to mate for life, build nests together, and to use a stone as a [[surrogate]] egg in nesting and brooding. In 2004, the [[Central Park Zoo]] in [[New York City]]  replaced one male couple's stone with a fertile egg, which the couple then raised as their own offspring.<ref>Dinitia Smith, [https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Central-Park-Zoo-s-gay-penguins-ignite-debate-2825165.php Central Park Zoo's gay penguins ignite debate] ''San Francisco Chronicle'', February 7, 2004. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> German and Japanese zoos have also reported homosexual behavior among their penguins. This phenomenon has also been reported at Kelly Tarlton's Aquarium in [[Auckland]], [[New Zealand]].
 +
*Homosexual behavior in male [[sheep]] (found in 6-10 percent of rams) is associated with variations in cerebral mass distribution and chemical activity. A study reported in ''Endocrinology'' concluded that biological and physiological factors are in effect.<ref>Charles E. Roselli, et al., [https://academic.oup.com/endo/article/145/2/478/2499800 The Volume of a Sexually Dimorphic Nucleus in the Ovine Medial Preoptic Area/Anterior Hypothalamus Varies with Sexual Partner Preference] ''The Endocrine Society'' 145(2) (February 1, 2004: 478–483. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
  
It is also asserted that scientific studies focus too much on the search for a biological explanation for sexual orientation, and not enough on the combined effects of both biology and psychology.
+
While animal behavior cannot easily be extrapolated to humans, homosexual advocates seize upon this data to suggest that homosexual behavior is part of the order of nature and not contrary to nature. Critics point out that much of the homosexual behavior observed in animals is situational, occurring only when there is no opportunity for heterosexual activity, for example in the crowded conditions of zoos where the animals are penned in, or as a means of social cooperation in raising young. It thus may be analogous to the situational homosexuality found in [[prison]] and the military where otherwise heterosexual humans may resort to homosexual activity.
  
In a brief put forth by the [[Council for Responsible Genetics]], they review studies done so far and conclude that the evidence that [[sexual orientation]] is fixed at birth, is inconclusive. On the discourse over sexual orientation: "Noticeably missing from this debate is the notion, championed by [[Alfred Kinsey|Kinsey]], that human sexual expression is as variable among people as many other complex traits. Yet just like intelligence, sexuality is a complex human feature that modern science is attempting to explain with genetics... Rather than determining that this results from purely biological processes, a trait evolves from developmental processes that include both biological and social elements. In addition, scientists rarely take into consideration sexual preferences that are not described by the two poles heterosexual and homosexual, 'in hopes of maximizing the chance that they will find something of interest.'" <ref> {{cite web|url= http://www.gene-watch.org/programs/determinism/SO.html|title= Brief on Sexual Orientation and Genetic Determinism'}}|</ref>
+
====Genetic studies====
 +
The strongest evidence for genetic inheritance of a particular trait or condition would be to find higher incidence in identical twins. Bailey and Pillard studied the sexual orientation of male siblings in the same family. They found that if one sibling was homosexual, the chance of the other sibling also being homosexual was 52 percent for an identical twin, 22 percent for a fraternal (non-identical) twin, and 10 percent for adopted or non-twin brothers.<ref>John M. Bailey and Richard Pillard, [https://www.scholars.northwestern.edu/en/publications/a-genetic-study-of-male-sexual-orientation A Genetic Study of Male Sexual Orientation] ''Archives of General Psychiatry'' ''Archives of General Psychiatry'' 48(12) (1991): 1089-1096. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> The study is suggestive, but it is not definitive and has been critiqued for possible sampling errors. In fact, some have suggested that their findings provide strong evidence for the influence of the environment.<ref>Dave Miller, et al., [http://www.apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=7&article=1388 "This is the Way God Made Me"—A Scientific Examination of Homosexuality and the "Gay Gene"] ''Apologetics Press''. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>  
  
===Behavior modification===
+
Dean Hamer of the National Cancer Institute used chromosome mapping to attempt to identify some genetic markers responsible for same-sex attraction, the so-called "gay gene."<ref>Dean Hamer, et al., [https://science.sciencemag.org/content/261/5119/321 A Linkage Between DNA Markers on the X Chromosome and Male Sexual Orientation] ''Science'' 261(5119) (July 16, 1993): 321-327. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> However, Hamer failed to use a control group, as the subjects' heterosexual brothers might have had the same genetic markers. A Canadian research team using a similar experimental design was unable to duplicate the findings of Hamer’s study.<ref>George Rice, Carol Anderson, Neil Risch, and George Ebers, Male Homosexuality: Absence of Linkage to Microsatellite Markers on the X Chromosome in a Canadian Study ''Science'' 284(5414) (April 23, 1999): 665-667.</ref>
  
 +
At this point, research attempting to demonstrate biological causes of homosexuality are regarded skeptically by many mainstream biologists. The research has been suggestive, but it is plagued by methodological problems including poor sampling, lack of rigorous control groups, and lack of replicability by other researchers. Comments like this are typical:
 +
:Recent studies postulate biologic factors as the primary basis for sexual orientation. However, there is no evidence at present to substantiate a biologic theory, just as there is no compelling evidence to support any singular psychological explanation. While all behavior must have an ultimate biologic substrate, the appeal of current biologic explanations for sexual orientation may derive more from dissatisfaction with the present status of psychosocial explanations than from a substantiating body of experimental data. Critical review shows the evidence favoring a biologic theory to be lacking. In an alternative model, temperamental and personality traits interact with the familial and social milieu as the individual’s sexuality emerges.<ref>William Byne and Bruce Parsons, [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/14760555_Human_Sexual_Orientation_The_Biologic_Theories_Reappraised Human Sexual Orientation: The Biologic Theories Reappraised] ''Archives of General Psychiatry'' 50(3) (April 1993):228-39. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
  
Homosexuality was officially removed as a disorder from the [[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders|DSM]] in 1974 (although a category of "sexual orientation disturbance" and then "ego-dystonic homosexuality" remained for another 14 years). Homosexuality is no longer generally regarded as a mental illness or as needing "treatment," and there are also moves to delete "Gender Identity Disorder" from the DSM-IV<ref>http://www.psych.org/pnews/97-11-21/isay.html psych.org</ref> Most mainstream medical and psychological organizations will not perform psychotherapy to change sexual orientation as they consider it ineffective and potentially harmful.<ref>http://psychology.ucdavis.edu/rainbow/html/resolution97_text.html</ref>
+
:Reports of morphological differences between the brains of humans with different sexual orientation or gender identity have furthered speculation that such behaviors may result from hormonal or genetic influences on the developing brain. However, the causal chain may be reversed; sexual behavior in adulthood may have caused the morphological differences…. It is possible that differences in sexual behavior cause, rather than are caused by, differences in brain structure.<ref>Stephen Marc Breedlove, [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/260811670_Sex_on_the_brain Sex on the brain] ''Nature'' 389(6653) (October 23, 1997): 801. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>  
  
Nevertheless, a number of groups, particularly religious ones, continue to promulgate the view that homosexuality is a defective behavioral condition which can be corrected with behavioral conditioning. [[Reparative therapy]] is a form of [[aversion therapy]] aimed at the elimination of homosexual attractions and is employed by people who claim that homosexuality is a disorder or a sin; this has in the past involved such methods as [[shock treatment]]<ref>Thompson, George N. ''Electroshock and Other Therapeutic Considerations in Sexual Psychopathy''; Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1949</ref> with the electrodes hooked up to a man's testicles, drugs used to induce physical illness while the subject is being shown pictures of naked men.<ref>http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=327 splcenter.org</ref>, and the administration of [[Metrazol]] to induce convulsions<ref>Owensby, Newdigate M. ''Homosexuality and Lesbianism Treated with Metrazol''; Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, pp. 65-66;1940</ref>. It should be noted that no such "treatments" will be performed by credible psychotherapists that practice in the United States, as this would be a breach of the APA's code of conduct and ethics.<ref>http://www.apa.org/ethics/code2002.html APA code of conduct</ref>.  More modern reparative therapy organizations such as [[NARTH]] neither practice nor condone such techniques. A "transformational ministry" claims that homosexual behavior is essentially a sin that can be overcome through a religious approach employing repentance and faith.
+
Supposing these genetic studies are borne out by further research; how does one interpret them? Quite a number of [[disease]]s, [[mental illness|mental disorders]] and [[disability|disabilities]] have a genetic component, including [[Huntington's disease]], Type 1 [[diabetes]], [[multiple sclerosis]], [[schizophrenia]], [[alcoholism]] and [[autism]]. On the other hand, normal traits such has [[left-handedness]] and [[skin color]] are also genetic. Hence, finding a genetic factor in homosexuality does not in itself prove that homosexuality is within the range of normal behavior. Furthermore, as genetic research proceeds with the goal of finding methods of gene manipulation to effect cures for illnesses like diabetes and autism, the same could potentially be done for homosexuality.  
  
According to the group [[Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance]], many groups that practice "conversion therapies" claim high success rates, in some cases as high as 70%. These studies are not presented to peer groups for evaluation and often lack much data when published. When these claims are investigated by means of scientific studies based on available data, they actually have a success rate of only 0.4 to 0.6% (statistically zero).<ref>http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_exod1.htm religioustolerance.org</ref>
+
Neither do such studies prove that genes are the ''cause'' of homosexuality. If homosexuality were strictly caused by genes—as is, for example, skin color—then 100 percent of identical twins of homosexuals would become homosexual; but Bailey and Pillard find that the percentage is around 50 percent. This means that some other cause must contribute the other 50 percent—Bailey himself stated, "There must be something in the environment to yield the discordant twins."<ref>David Gelman et al., [https://www.newsweek.com/homosexuality-born-or-bred-200636 Born or Bred?] ''Newsweek'' (February 24, 1992), 46. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> The alleged genetic basis would create a ''propensity'' to be homosexual, but it does not ''determine'' homosexuality. The other factor is likely to be environmental. [[Schizophrenia]] presents similarly: genes account for about 50 percent and the other 50 percent is environmental. There is some yet unknown synergy between genes and environment that together produces homosexuality. Some researchers speculate that some environmental effect may trigger the "gay gene" to full expression—perhaps an event in early childhood. More likely, the gene or genes may confer a certain heightened susceptibility to same-sex attraction that will become fixated based on life-choices made after [[puberty]]. In short, both nature and nurture may be involved.
  
"Ex-gay" supporters point to people who claim to have experienced success. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.narth.com/menus/interviews.html|date=September 30, 2005|accessdate=2006-04-13|publisher=National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality|title=Interviews/Testimonials}}</ref> <ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.exodus.to/stories;|title= Exodus International Testimonies}}|</ref> <ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.hopeandnewlife.org/testimonies.html| title= Hope and New Life Ministries Testimonies}}|</ref>Conservative groups point to critique papers such as the one written by the [[Council for Responsible Genetics]] that sexuality may not be predetermined either way. <ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.gene-watch.org/programs/determinism/SO.html| title= Brief on Sexual Orientation and Genetic Determinism}}|</ref> However, most of this evidence is anecdotal, being based on testimonies by ministry participants, and to the neglect of the [[scientific method]].
+
====Prenatal hormonal theory====
 
+
Psychologist [[Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing]]'s ''Psychopathia Sexualis'' (1866) was the first scientific discussion of homosexuality. After interviewing many homosexuals, both as his private patients and as a forensic expert, Krafft-Ebing arrived at the conclusion that homosexuality is an anomalous process of [[embryo]]nic development that leads to a "sexual inversion" of the [[brain]].  
==Homosexuality and society==
 
{{main|Societal attitudes towards homosexuality}}
 
[[Image:Lesymuralccsf.JPG|thumb|right|A mural of a female couple kissing on the [[City College of San Francisco|CCSF]] student union in San Francisco]]
 
[[Societal attitudes towards homosexuality|Societal attitudes towards same-sex relationships]], reflected in the attitude of the general population, the state and the church, have varied over the centuries, and from place to place, from expecting and requiring all males to engage in relationships, to casual integration, through acceptance, to seeing the practice as a minor sin, repressing it through law enforcement and judicial mechanisms, to proscribing it under penalty of death.
 
 
 
Most nations do not impede consensual sex between unrelated individuals above the local [[age of consent]]. Some jurisdictions further recognize identical rights, protections, and privileges for the family structures of same-sex couples, including [[same-sex marriage|marriage]]. Some nations mandate that all individuals restrict themselves to heterosexual relationships &mdash; that is, in some jurisdictions homosexuality is illegal. Offenders face up to the death penalty in some fundamentalist Muslim areas such as [[Iran]] and parts of [[Nigeria]]. There are, however, often significant differences between official policy and real-world enforcement.
 
''See [[Violence against gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and the transgendered]]''.
 
 
 
===Coming out===
 
{{main|Coming out}}
 
Many people who feel attracted to members of their own sex have a so-called coming out at some point in their lives. Generally, coming out is described in two phases. The first phase is the phase of "knowing oneself," and the realization or decision emerges that one is open to same-sex relations. This is often described as an internal coming out. The second phase involves one's decision to come out to others, e.g. family, friends, and/or colleagues. This occurs with many people as early as age 11, but others do not clarify their sexual orientation until age 40 or older. Most have their coming out during school age, so sometime during the time of puberty. At this age, they may not trust or ask for help from others, especially when their orientation is not accepted in society. Sometimes their own parents are not even informed.
 
 
 
===Suicide rates===
 
Coming out can sometimes lead to a life crisis, which can elevate to [[suicidal ideation|suicidal thoughts]] or even committing [[suicide]]. Crisis centers in larger cities and information sites on the Internet can help these people to accept their homosexuality. In the United States, the attempted suicide rate is sixteen times higher among male gay youth (aged seventeen) who display homosexual tendencies than their heterosexual peers. Among twenty-year-old men, the attempted suicide rate is thirteen times higher; among 25-year-old men, it is six times higher. Attempted suicide among lesbians is also elevated compared to heterosexual women, about two times higher. Many resource groups offer suicide counseling, hotlines and other ways to help.<ref>http://www.suicide.org/gay-and-lesbian-suicide.html Suicide.org</ref>
 
 
 
===Sexual practices===
 
Homosexual men obtain physical pleasure in a number of different ways. One scheme breaks these down into four categories: [[mutual masturbation]], full body (including [[intercrural sex]]), [[fellatio|oral genital]] and [[anal intercourse|anal]]. Physical relationships begin with various forms of [[foreplay]] such as fondling, caressing, and kissing, and eventually can progress to one of the four forms of fulfillment mentioned above.
 
 
 
Mutual masturbation, intercrural sex and fellatio are the most popular sexual practices, in that order. In the United Kingdom in the late nineteen sixties it was assumed that no more than about 15% of practicing homosexual men took part in anal sex, a figure thought to be equal to or lower than that of heterosexual couples practicing the same technique, often for purposes of birth control.<ref>H. Montgomery Hyde, The Love That Dared not Speak its Name; pp.6-8</ref>
 
 
 
The range of homosexual female practices can include [[tribadism]], [[mutual masturbation]], [[cunnilingus|oral genital]], [[annilingus]], [[fisting]] and the use of [[sex toys]] for vaginal or oral penetration or clitoral stimulation.
 
 
 
===Modern law===
 
{{main|Homosexuality laws of the world}} {{main|Gay rights in Europe}}
 
{{see also|sodomy law|public order crime|victimless crime}}
 
In most [[Developed country|developed countries]], same-sex relationships are accepted, and are accorded legal protection. Many governments have established formal structures for confirming legal relationships (either as marriage or partnership) between people of the same sex. For example, the [[Supreme Court of Canada]], citing the [[Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms|Charter of Rights and Freedoms]], established that the [[Government of Canada|Government]] could allow same-sex marriage on the basis of human rights, which it then did when [[Same-sex marriage in Canada|Bill C-38]] received [[Royal Assent]] on July 20, 2005.
 
 
 
Some people argue for legal recognition and social acceptance of same-sex relationships, believing that homosexuality is an inborn trait; yet it is difficult for others who believe that homosexuality is a choice to change their moral stance on homosexuality. Some religious groups fear the [[slippery slope]] effect, arguing that same-sex tolerance is a step toward tolerance of other currently unaccepted practices such as polygamy and incest. Other religious-minded people believe that same-sex relationships are incompatible with their religious beliefs and world view. They often attempt to use state-sanctioned punitive measures to discourage homosexuality, short of death or imprisonment. This includes attempts to rescind domestic partnership benefits through anti-gay-marriage initiatives with broad language.
 
 
 
In some cultures homosexuality is still considered "unnatural" and is outlawed. In some [[Muslim]] nations (such as [[Iran]]) it remains a [[capital punishment|capital crime]], as well as in some [[Africa|African]] countries.  For example, two teenagers, [[Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni]], were executed in Iran in 2005 reportedly because they had been caught having sex with each other, although the Iranian government maintains the conduct involved rape; the details of the event, including the allegations of the government, remain under dispute, particularly in the West.
 
 
 
===Understudied phenomenon===
 
Despite the emollience of attitudes towards, and general acceptance of homosexuality in some societies, in [[psychology]] it is considered an 'understudied relationship'. In his book ''Understudied Relationships'', [[social psychology|social psychologist]] S.W. Duck found that most mainstream research is predisposed towards studying only [[heterosexuality]], in terms of relationships in contemporary Western cultures, implying that same-sex relationships are neglected and ignored by the majority of psychologists. More research since the 1990s has focused on homosexual relationships. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
===Political aspects===
 
[[Image:Burning of Sodomites.jpg|thumb|''Burning of Sodomites''<br/>The Knight von Hohenberg and his squire being burned at the stake for sodomy, [[Zurich]] 1482 ([[Spiezer Schilling]])]]
 
 
 
====Scapegoating====
 
 
 
{{main|History of gays in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust|History of the Knights Templar#Charges of heresy}}
 
 
 
Homosexuality has at times been used as a [[scapegoat]] by governments facing problems. For example, during the early 14th century, accusations of homosexual behavior were instrumental in disbanding the [[Knights Templar]] under [[Philip IV of France]], who profited greatly from confiscating the Templars' wealth.  In the 20th century, [[Nazi Germany]]'s persecution of homosexual people was based on the proposition that they posed a threat to "normal" masculinity as well as a risk of contamination to the "[[Aryan race]]."
 
 
 
In the 1950s, at the height of the [[red scare]] in the United States, hundreds of federal and state employees were fired on account of their homosexuality, the so-called [[lavender scare]].  (Ironically, politicians opposed to the scare tactics of [[McCarthyism]] tried to discredit Senator [[Joseph McCarthy]] by hinting during a televised Congressional committee meeting that McCarthy's top aide, [[Roy Cohn]], was homosexual, as he in fact was.)
 
 
 
A recent instance of scapegoating is the burning of 6,000 books of homoerotic poetry of 8th c. Persian-Arab poet [[Abu Nuwas]] by the Egyptian Ministry of Culture in January 2001, to placate [[Islamic fundamentalism|Islamic fundamentalists]].<ref>''Al-Hayat'', January 13, 2001</ref><ref>''Middle East Report'', 219 Summer 2001</ref>
 
 
 
====Business and attitudes towards homosexuality====
 
In countries where business structures have a significant degree of [[Wiktionary:autonomy|autonomy]] from a government, the companies have often been at the forefront in treating gay men and women equally. In the United States, the level of equal parity is much more common in business structures than governments. As of 2005 approximately 45% of companies within the [[Fortune 500]] offered [[Domestic partnership|domestic partner]] benefits and nine of the top ten companies include [[sexual orientation]] in their non-discrimination policies.
 
 
 
===Military===
 
====In the ancient world====
 
Some [[Ancient history|ancient]] societies, such as [[Ancient Greece|Greece]] and [[History of Japan|Japan]], fostered erotic love bonds between experienced warriors and their apprentices. It was believed that a man and youth who were in love with each other would fight harder and with greater [[morale]]. A classic example of a military force built upon this belief is the [[Sacred Band of Thebes]].
 
  
====During the Middle Ages====
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Today the neurobiology of the masculinization of the fetal [[brain]] is fairly well understood. [[Estradiol]], and [[testosterone]], which is catalyzed by the enzyme 5α-reductase into dihydrotestosterone, act upon [[androgen]] receptors in the brain to masculinize it. If there are few androgen receptors (people with [[Androgen insensitivity syndrome]]) or too much androgen (females with [[Congenital adrenal hyperplasia]]) there can be physical and psychological effects.<ref>E. Villain, "Genetics of Sexual Development." ''Annual Review of Sex Research'' 11 (2000)</ref> It has been suggested that both male and female homosexuality are results of variation in this process.<ref>Glenn Wilson and Qazi Rahman, ''Born Gay?: The Psychobiology of Sex Orientation'' (Peter Owen Publishers, 2005, ISBN 0720612233), chapter 5. "Hormones in the womb."</ref> However, studies seeking to demonstrate a link between this developmental process and homosexuality have been inconclusive. While [[lesbianism]] is linked with a higher amount of masculinization than is found in heterosexual females; however, the data as regards male homosexuality shows no significant correlation.
The adoption of [[Christianity]] by the [[Roman Empire|Roman]] Emperor [[Constantine I (emperor)|Constantine]] in the [[4th century|fourth century]] and subsequent predominance of Christianity led to a diminished emphasis on erotic love among military forces. By the time of the [[Crusades]], the military of [[Europe]] had largely switched gears, asserting that carnal relations between males were sinful and therefore had no place in an army that served their perception of [[God]]'s will. The [[Knights Templar]], a prominent military order, was destroyed by accusations (possibly fabricated) of [[sodomy]].
 
  
The [[Arab world]] and [[Asia]], by contrast, did not adopt such strict views. A classic work of Middle Eastern literature known as ''[[The Book of One Thousand and One Nights]]'' (or ''Arabian Nights'') documents several accounts of intimate relationships between men and boys. Artwork that has survived from this period documents such relationships in both cultures.
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Failure to confirm the prenatal hormone theory does not mean that some other developmental mechanism may be at work, perhaps in early childhood. Even if such a mechanism were found, we would be far from knowing whether this mechanism was the result of the genetic factor mentioned above or an independent factor, perhaps environmental.
  
====In modern times====
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===Nurture===
{{Seealso|Sexual orientation and military service}}
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The variety of the specific social constructions of homosexuality across cultures (above) supports the view that a large component of homosexuality is socially conditioned and learned behavior. In societies with age-structured homosexuality such as [[Ancient Greece]], homosexual youths upon maturity would take on heterosexual patterns of life. The social argument for homosexuality dates back to the ancient Greeks. [[Aristophanes]] in the ''Symposium'' viewed homosexuality as a desire by men to share a long-term fulfillment of the soul. He believed that two souls are longing to be together, however sexual desire alone is not strong enough to create that bond; rather it is the cultural environment that allows or forbids the relationship to occur.<ref>John Thorp, The Social Construction of Homosexuality ''Phoenix'' 46(1) (1992): 54-65.</ref>
The modern world has brought about a fundamental shift in the acceptance of homosexual behavior. [[Europe]] and [[North America]] have seen growing acceptance of homosexuality as a result of modern [[liberalism]] and the [[Gay Liberation]] movement. By contrast, many [[Middle East]]ern and [[Central Asia]]n countries have gone from tolerance to outright hostility. The only nation in the region with significantly different policies is [[Israel]].
 
  
Attitudes world wide vary, from country to country and over time, with some countries—like the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[Netherlands]] &mdash; accepting openly homosexual individuals into the armed forces, and others &mdash; like the [[United States]], [http://www.holocaust-trc.org/homosx.htm Nazi Germany], and many nations in [[South America]] and the [[Caribbean]] &mdash; either quieting or discharging homosexual people. The United States is known for its “[[don't ask, don't tell]]” policy, which is seen as a compromise between acceptance and the tactics of marginalization and humiliation that had been used before.
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The view that much homosexuality is socially constructed is supported by clear instances of situational homosexuality. Situational homosexuality occurs when there is no opportunity for heterosexual activity, as in [[prison]], the military, and [[monasticism|monastic]] orders. In prisons for example, homosexual behavior is commonplace and provides a way of asserting dominance and requiring submission. In some [[tribe]]s of [[Papua]] New Guinea insemination of adolescent boys by the warriors of the tribe was mandatory. Most "situational homosexuals" are heterosexual in other social contexts.  
  
Most nations that adhere to the strict interpretation of [[Sharia]] (Islamic law) remove individuals from their armed forces who are believed to be homosexual, and may punish, torture, or subject them to the death penalty.<!-- need some more about Asia and Africa —>
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Yet there is no bright line between situational homosexuality and other homosexualities. For example, the well-known pederasty of ancient Greece mentioned above, was expected of well-bred youths as society regarded it beneficial to their education.
  
 +
[[Psychologist]]s, particularly in [[psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]] or [[developmental psychology|developmental]] traditions, speculated that formative childhood experiences underlie sexual orientation. Classically, [[Sigmund Freud]] believed that all children go through a stage in their psychosexual development when they are bisexual and have the potential for either heterosexual or homosexual expression, from which they normally make the transition to heterosexuality in adulthood. Those who turn to homosexuality as adults he believed had experienced some traumatic event that arrested their sexual development. Contemporary psychologists look at problems in parental and family dynamics in childhood that create issues of gender identification later in life.
  
===Religious views===
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====Psychology of homosexuality====
{{main|Religion and homosexuality}}
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Among psychologists who regard homosexuality as a treatable condition, the prevailing theory is that homosexual feelings, thoughts, and desires are symptoms of deeper psychological issues. They represent a defensive response to conflicts in the present, a way to compensate for the pain and discomfort of an unresolved childhood trauma, archaic emotions, frozen feelings, and wounds that never healed. They also represent a reparative drive to fulfill unmet homo-emotional love needs of the past—an unconscious drive for bonding with the same-sex parent. Elizabeth Moberly and Joseph Nicolosi developed the term "homo-emotional love need."<ref>Elizabeth Moberly, ''Psychogenesis: The Early Development of Gender Identity'' (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983), 67.</ref><ref> Joseph Nicolosi, ''Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality'' (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson Inc., 1991), 32–35.</ref>
  
The relationship between religion and homosexuality varies greatly across time and place, within and between different religions and sects, and regarding different forms of homosexuality and bisexuality. Groups not influenced by the Abrahamic religions have sometimes regarded homosexuality as sacred, while a negative view of homosexuality has been common in the Abrahamic religions. In the wake of colonialism and imperialism undertaken by countries of the Abrahamic faiths some cultures have adopted new attitudes antagonistic towards homosexuality. Currently, bodies and doctrines of the Abrahamic religions generally view homosexuality negatively, from quietly discouraging homosexual activity, to explicitly forbidding same-sex sexual practices among adherents and actively opposing social acceptance of homosexuality. Some teach that homosexual orientation itself is sinful, while others assert that only sodomy is a sin. Some have claimed that homosexuality can be overcome through religious faith and practice. No scientific studies have been undertaken on this matter.
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A homo-emotional love need is an unconscious drive for bonding between a son and his father, or between a daughter and her mother. If questioned, the active homosexual would not say he is looking for his father’s love in the arms of another man. It is rather a hidden, unconscious drive buried deep in the psyche. This is a variation of the general principle that applies to people's choice of partners in heterosexual relationships, which are conditioned by unconscious childhood needs. According to Harville Hendrix:
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<blockquote>Each of us enters adulthood harboring unresolved childhood issues with our parents, whether or not we know it or will admit it. Those needs have to be met, because their satisfaction is equated, in our unconscious minds, with survival. Therefore, their satisfaction becomes the agenda in adult love relationships.<ref>Harville Hendrix, ''Getting the Love You Want: A Couples’ Study Guide'' (New York: Harper Perennial, 1988), 26.</ref></blockquote>
  
===Polemic===
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Therapist Richard Cohen, executive director of PATH (Positive Approaches to Healthy Sexuality), describes three underlying drives that contribute to unwanted same-sex attractions:<ref>[https://www.pathinfo.org/ PATH] Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
{{main|Anti-gay slogan}}
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*'''Need for the same-sex parent’s love''': Homosexual thoughts and feelings originate in preadolescent experiences. Therefore, it is basically a nonsexual condition. “The homosexual love need is essentially a search for parenting…. What the homosexual seeks is the fulfillment of these normal attachment needs, which have abnormally been left unmet in the process of growth.”<ref>Elizabeth Moberly, ''Homosexuality: A New Christian Ethic'' (Greenwood, SC: James Clark & Co., 1983), 9.</ref> That is, a man is looking for his father’s love through another man, and a woman is looking for her mother’s love through another woman. Therefore, the drive is one of reparation, seeking to fulfill unmet love needs of the past. However, these deeper emotional love needs can never be fulfilled through sexual relationships. Sex never heals nor fulfills them, because they are the unmet needs of a child. Reparative therapy strives to heel these needs through nonsexual bonding.
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*'''Need for gender identification''': The homosexual person feels a lack of masculinity or femininity within himself or herself and seeks to fulfill this need through another man or woman.<ref>E.A. Kaplan, [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/6021478/ Homosexuality: A Search for the Ego-Ideal] ''Archives of General Psychiatry'' 16(3) (1967): 355–358. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> This resulted from a distant or disrupted relationship between father and son or mother and daughter in early childhood or adolescence. Homosexual people experience this as a feeling of inadequacy and incompleteness and search for the missing part of themselves through a sexual contact or union with another person of the same sex, which provides, at least momentarily, that longed-for sense of wholeness.
  
Same-sex love practices have been the subject of a continuing debate dating back at least to Classical Greece. In antiquity, and in countries not under the sway of Abrahamic beliefs, the debates usually took the form of debating which love is best, the love of women or the love of boys, unlike more recent discussions which frame the question in terms of "right" and "wrong."
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*'''Fear of intimacy with someone of the opposite sex''': Some homosexual males had an abnormally close mother-son attachment as a child. He may overidentify with his mother and femininity and disidentify with his father and masculinity. Later in puberty, the son may experience sexual attraction toward his mother that leads to extreme guilt and the repression of a normal sexual drive toward women. He might then turn to men for intimacy and sex, not wanting to “betray” his mother or re-experience his guilt. This process may be completely unconscious.<ref>Irving Bieber et al., ''Homosexuality: A Psychoanalytic Study of Male Homosexuals'' (Jason Aronson, Inc., 1962, ISBN 978-0876689899), 44–46.</ref> <ref>Gerard van den Aardweg, ''Homosexuality and Hope: A Psychologist Talks About Treatment and Change'' (Ann Arbor, MI: Servant Books, 1985), 64.</ref> <ref>Robert Kronemeyer, ''Overcoming Homosexuality'' (New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1980), 60–71.</ref> Lesbians often suffered childhood abuse at the hands of the father or another significant man. The abuse could have been sexual, emotional, mental, or physical. This leaves her deeply traumatized by men. Not wanting to re-experience the memory of abuse, she then turns to women for comfort, love, and understanding.<ref>Michael Saia, ''Counseling the Homosexual'' (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1988), 57–58.</ref>
  
Each camp has made use of a relatively circumscribed arsenal of arguments, some of which have not changed greatly over the past two and a half thousand years. Recent advances in [[sociology|sociological studies]] and other [[discourse]] such as [[queer theory]] have brought a measure of rigor to the debate.
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Cohen lists ten psycho-social wounds that can destabilize the formation of healthy attachments and contribute to the formation of homosexual attachments:<ref>Richard Cohen, ''Being Gay: Nature, Nurture or Both?'' (PATH, 2020, ISBN 978-1733846929).</ref>
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#'''Heredity''': Inherited wounds; Unresolved family issues; Misperceptions; Mental filters; Predilection for rejection.
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#'''Temperament''': Hypersensitive; High maintenance; Artistic nature; Gender nonconforming behaviors: Male more feminine; Female more masculine.
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#'''Hetero-Emotional Wounds''': Enmeshment; Neglect; Abuse; Abandonment; Addictions; Imitation of behaviors; Wrong sex.
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#'''Homo-Emotional Wounds''': Neglect; Abuse; Enmeshment; Abandonment; Addictions; Imitation of behaviors; Wrong sex.
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#'''Sibling Wounds/Family Dynamics''': Put-downs; Abuse; Name-calling.
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#'''Body Image Wounds''': Late Bloomer; Physical disabilities; Shorter; Skinnier; Larger; Lack of coordination.
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#'''Sexual Abuse''': Homosexual imprinting; Learned and reinforced behaviors; Substitute for affection.
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#'''Social or Peer Wounds''': Name-calling; Put-downs; Goody-goody; Teacher’s pet; Nonathletic; No rough and tumble (boy); Too rough and tumble (girl).
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#'''Cultural Wounds''': Media; Educational system; Entertainment industry; Internet; Pornography.
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#'''Other Factors''': Divorce; Death; Intrauterine experiences and influences; Adoption; Religion.
  
====Pro====
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==Treatment==
* "It is commonplace in nature." Based on zoologists' observations of many different species.<ref name="we">{{cite web|url=http://web.archive.org/web/20041010062748/http://www.wholeearthmag.com/ArticleBin/338.html| title=Left-Handed Bears & Androgynous Cassowaries|author=Bruce Bagemihl|publisher=Whole Earth|date=Spring 2000|accessdate=2006-04-13}}</ref>
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That homosexuality is no longer generally viewed as a treatable disease by mental health professionals is mainly due to the APA's position that homosexuality should be regarded not as a disorder but rather within the range of socially acceptable sexual expression. Therefore, there are ethical and political issues surrounding treating homosexuality as a disorder. The prevailing attitude of the mental health profession and recovery movement is “gay affirmative therapy,” helping the client come to accept their homosexuality. Yet helping clients in this way may leave an unresolved ache in the soul, if that person is inwardly crying out for recovering his or her original heterosexual being.
* "Suppressing it alters the balance of nature." A Bedamini Melanesian belief.<ref name="we" />
 
* "It foments close friendships and independent thinking." Also in Lucian
 
* "It [male homosexuality] is a mark of true masculinity." Claimed by [[Sufism|Indian Sufi]] [[Akhi Jamshed Rajgiri]] in self defense before the Sultan of Jaunpur for his love of youths. (In Vanita & Kidwai, 2000, p.139)
 
* "Suppression is irrational." [[Jeremy Bentham]], in his 1785 essay on "Paederasty" (first English language text on homosexuality). In that same work, he also states: "It is wonderful that nobody has ever yet fancied it to be sinful to scratch where it itches, and that it has never been determined that the only natural way of scratching is with such or such a finger and that it is unnatural to scratch with any other."
 
* "The male form is superior to the female form." (implication for male homosexuality) Medieval Arabic text included in ''[[The Book of One Thousand and One Nights]]'' (The Debate Between the Wise Woman and the Sage).
 
  
====Con====
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Those who do believe homosexuality in the form of unwanted same-sex attraction to be a condition, have developed programs similar to alcohol and drug treatment programs in which clinicians help homosexuals overcome their preference for homosexual behavior and attraction to people of the same sex, as well as developing satisfying heterosexual relationships. These treatment programs are run by religious groups and psychotherapists.
* "Same-sex love is against nature." This charge dates back to Classical Greece, where it was first articulated by [[Plato]] in his ''[[Laws (dialogue)|Laws]]''.  It should be noted that Plato also portrayed many homosexual and homoerotic scenes in his dialogues, most notably in the [[Lysis (dialogue)|Lysis]], Charmides, and [[Symposium (Plato)|Symposium]].
 
* "It is condemned by God." Expressed by some interpretations of religious texts, for exaple with repect to the [[Bible]]'s [[Sodom and Gomorrah]] story and also the [[Qur'an]].
 
* "It leads to plagues and natural disasters." Advanced by Christian authorities from late Antiquity through the Renaissance, as well as by orthodox Islamic ones. (As in the poems of [[Sanai]])
 
* "It is abuse of the young." Encountered in "Erotes," a dialogue of the early Christian era by [[Lucian]]. This claim reflects an understanding of homosexuality that does not distinguish it from [[child sexual abuse]].
 
  
==Same-sex love in pre-modern times==
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Therapists recognize the futility of simply "toughing it out" in a heterosexual marriage or striving to "pray away" unwanted homosexual feelings:
{{main|History of human sexuality}}
 
  
Sexual customs have varied greatly over time and from one region to another. These, as well as the orientation of particular pre-contemporary figures continue to be studied. Modern Western gay culture, largely a product of 19th century [[psychology]] as well as the years of post-[[Stonewall riots|Stonewall]] [[Gay Liberation]], is a relatively recent manifestation of same-sex desire. It is generally not applicable as a standard when investigating same-gender sex and historical opinions and beliefs held by other people.
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<blockquote>Marriage is not the solution for anyone who has homosexual feelings, because a woman can never meet the homo-emotional needs of a man, and a man can never meet the homo-emotional needs of a woman. In the process of recovery, first a man must heal with other men, and a woman must heal with other women.</br>
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Some of my well-intentioned friends told me, “Richard, just find the right woman and she’ll straighten you out,” or “Just pray hard enough, and God will take it all away. If not, then you’re doing something wrong.” Well, I wish it would have been that simple, but it was not. I prayed and prayed for God to take the desires away, but He did not. I married, hoping it would straighten me out, but the same-sex desires only intensified. I came to understand that I had been praying the wrong prayer for nearly twenty years. What I needed to pray was: “God, please show me the meaning of my same-sex desires.” Later, I understood that God would never take them away, because they had a deeper meaning that I needed to discover, heal, and ultimately fulfill in healthy, non-sexual relationships.<ref name=Cohen/></blockquote>
  
It is generally accepted that the lives of historical figures such as [[Socrates]], [[George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron|Lord Byron]], [[Edward II of England|Edward II]], [[Hadrian]], [[Julius Caesar]], [[Michelangelo]], [[Donatello]] and [[Christopher Marlowe]] included or were centered upon love and sexual relationships with people of their own gender. Terms such as ''gay'' or ''bisexual'' have been applied to them, but many regard this as risking the anachronistic introduction of a contemporary [[social construction|construction]] of sexuality foreign to their times.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Variations from modern standards of beauty, social roles, sexual positions, and age disparities are of such magnitude so as to render meaningless any projection of modern roles onto historical personages. This does not mean, however, that people in the past experienced the physical phenomenon of homosexual attraction any differently than people experience it today.
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Reparative therapists have developed a four-stage plan of therapy that begins with behavior change and continues over several years of to build up a healthy sense of self and deal with childhood wounds through non-sexual bonding in a supportive context supervised by the therapist.
  
While some pre-modern societies did not employ categories fully comparable to the modern homosexual or heterosexual dichotomy, this does not demonstrate that the polarity is not applicable to those societies. A common thread of constructionist argument is that no one in antiquity or the Middle Ages experienced homosexuality as an exclusive, permanent, or defining mode of sexuality. John Boswell has criticized this argument by citing ancient Greek writings by Plato,<ref>John Boswell, ''[http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/231.ctl Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century]'', University of Chicago Press, 1980 ISBN 978-0-226-06711-7 (ISBN-10: 0-226-06711-4)</ref> which he says indicate knowledge of exclusive homosexuality.
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==Religion and Homosexuality==
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Generally, traditional religious teachings condemn homosexuality as unnatural, abhorrent to God, and not leading to human fulfillment. Homosexuality, however, is rarely singled out but is classified among the several illicit sexual practices that are inimical to marriage and family, or among the failings on the path of self-control required of those pursuing a religious vocation.  
  
[[Michel Foucault]] and historians following his line of thought have argued that the ''homosexual person'' is a modern invention, a social construct of the last 100 years.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} While true of homosexuality as a ''scientific'' or ''psychological'' category, there are examples from earlier ages of those viewing their sexuality as a part of a human identity and not merely a sexual act. {{Fact|date=February 2007}} One cited example is the 16th century Italian artist [[Il Sodoma|Giovanni Antonio Bazzi]] who adopted the nickname "Sodoma," which is viewed by Louis Crompton as something analogous to the modern gay identity.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
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In response to the modern view that homosexuality is within the range of natural sexual attractions, some liberal religious groups have adopted an open stance towards homosexuals.
  
===Africa===
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===Judaism===
Though often denied or ignored by European explorers, homosexual expression in native Africa was also present and took a variety of forms.
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According to the [[Torah]], "[A man] shall not lie with another man as with a woman, it is a ''toeva'' (abomination)" (Leviticus 18:22). Like many similar commandments, the stated punishment for willful violation is the [[death penalty]], although in practice rabbinic Judaism rid itself of the death penalty for all practical purposes 2,000 years ago. Rabbinic Jewish tradition understands this verse to prohibit all forms of homosexual contact between men. Rabbinic works ban lesbian acts of sex as well.  
* Anthropologists Murray and Roscoe report that women in [[Lesotho]] have engaged in socially sanctioned "long term, erotic relationships" named ''motsoalle.''{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
* [[E. E. Evans-Pritchard]] reported that male [[Azande]] warriors (in the northern [[Democratic Republic of the Congo|Congo]]) routinely married male youths who functioned as temporary wives.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} The practice had died out in the early 20th century but was recounted to him by the elders.
 
* An academic paper by Stephen O. Murray examines the history of descriptions of {{PDFlink|[http://semgai.free.fr/doc_et_pdf/africa_A4.pdf "Homosexuality in traditional Sub-Saharan Africa"]|228&nbsp;[[Kibibyte|KiB]]<!-- application/pdf, 233567 bytes —>}}.
 
  
===Americas===
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Many liberal Jewish congregations are accepting of homosexuals. [[Reform Judaism]] does not argue that normative Jewish law can change to validate homosexual sex; the argument is that this law, like many of the laws in the Torah, is archaic and no longer binding in today's modern culture. Reform and Reconstructionist congregations now welcome members regardless of sexual orientation, and some rabbis have been known to perform [[same-sex marriages]].
[[Image:Catlin - Dance to the berdache.jpg|thumb|''Dance to the Berdache''<br />[[Sac and Fox Nation]] ceremonial dance to celebrate the two-spirit person. George Catlin (1796-1872); Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC]]
 
  
In North American Native society, the most common form of same-sex sexuality seems to centre around the figure of the [[Two-Spirit]] individual. Such people seem to have been recognized by the majority of tribes, each of which had its particular term for the role. Typically the two-spirit individual was recognized early in life, was given a choice by the parents to follow the path, and if the child accepted the role then the child was raised in the appropriate manner, learning the customs of the gender it had chosen. Two-spirit individuals were commonly [[Shamanism|shamans]] and were revered as having powers beyond those of ordinary shamans. Their sexual life would be with the ordinary tribe members of the opposite gender. Male two-spirit people were prized as wives because of their greater strength and ability to work.
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===Christianity===
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Traditional Christianity is firm in rejecting all forms of homosexuality. The condemnation in Leviticus mentioned above is confirmed by passages in New Testament, such as Acts 15:29 which explicitly advised that [[Gentile]] converts were to keep from [[sexual immorality]]. The first chapter of the [[Epistle to the Romans]] contains the only explicit mention of lesbianism in the Bible, calling it "against nature:"
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<blockquote>God gave them up unto vile passions: for their women changed the natural use into that which is against nature: and likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another…. (Romans 1:26-27)</blockquote>
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[[Image:Munster Sodom.jpg|thumb|250px|The destruction of Sodom as illustrated by [[Sebastian Münster]] (1564)]]
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God's judgment on homosexuality is illustrated by the fate of [[Sodom]] (from whence comes the term 'sodomy') and Gomorrah, after a mob surrounded Lot's house and demanded that he bring out the men who had come to lodge with them.  
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<blockquote>The men of Sodom surrounded the house, both young and old, all the people from every quarter; and they called to Lot and said to him, "Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us that we may have relations with them." But Lot went out to them at the doorway, and shut the door behind him, and said, "Please, my brothers, do not act wickedly. Now behold, I have two daughters who have not had relations with man; please let me bring them out to you, and do to them whatever you like; only do nothing to these men, inasmuch as they have come under the shelter of my roof." (Genesis 19:4-8)</blockquote> By offering his daughters, [[Lot]] was protecting the guests who had taken refuge in his home—an act of great hospitality—from the mob who were intent on homosexual rape. The cities were subsequently burned with fire and brimstone, a deserved punishment. The unnaturalness of the intended crime was made worse by the fact that the guests were in fact [[angel]]s. In the New Testament, the [[Epistle of Jude]] refers to this incident when describing an earlier unnatural union, between angels and human women in Genesis 6:1-2, which is said to have brought disaster upon the earth, when the sons of God took wives from among the daughters of men. It can also be interpreted as a reference to the relations between [[Lucifer]] and [[Eve]] at the [[Fall of Man]]: <blockquote>And the angels that did not keep their own position but left their proper dwelling have been kept by him in eternal chains in the nether gloom until the judgment of the great day; just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the surrounding cities, which likewise acted immorally and indulged in unnatural lust, serve as an example by undergoing a punishment of eternal fire. (Jude 6-7 RSV)</blockquote> Some Christians therefore make the connection between homosexuality and demon possession, the activity of fallen angels. Since angels are without gender, the behavior of fallen angels with one another and with humans could be a spiritual prototype of homosexuality.  
  
===East Asia===
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From early [[Christianity]] until recent times, the leading lights of the church have universally condemned homosexuality as among the worst of all sexual sins. Denunciations of sodomy are found in the church fathers, including [[Justin Martyr]], [[Clement of Alexandria]], [[Tertullian]], Saint [[Cyprian]], [[Eusebius of Caesarea|Eusebius]], Saint [[Basil of Caesarea|Basil the Great]], Saint [[John Chrysostom]], and Saint [[Augustine of Hippo]]. In the Medieval church, [[Thomas Aquinas]] denounced sodomy as second only to bestiality as the worst of all sexual sins, and [[Hildegard of Bingen]] in ''Scivias'' condemned sexual relations between women as "perverted forms." The [[Roman Catholic Church]] requires homosexuals to practice [[chastity]] in the understanding that homosexual acts are "intrinsically disordered," and "contrary to the [[natural law]]." It insists that all are expected to only have heterosexual relations and only in the context of a marriage, describing homosexual tendencies as "a trial," and stressing that people with such tendencies "must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity."<ref>[https://www.usccb.org/sites/default/files/flipbooks/catechism/568/ Chastity and homosexuality] ''Catechism of the Catholic Church''.  Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> For those seeking to become priests, the Vatican requires that any homosexual tendencies "must be clearly overcome at least three years before ordination."<ref>[http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccatheduc/documents/rc_con_ccatheduc_doc_20051104_istruzione_en.html Instruction Concerning the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in view of their Admission to the Seminary and to Holy Orders], ''Congregation for Catholic Education'', November 4, 2005. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
In [[Asia]] same-sex love has been known since the dawn of history. Early Western travelers were taken aback by its widespread acceptance and open display.
 
  
[[Homosexuality in China]], known as the ''pleasures of the bitten peach,'' ''the cut sleeve,'' or ''the southern custom,'' have been recorded since approximately 600 B.C.E.. These euphemistic terms were used to describe behaviors, but not identities (recently the Chinese society adapted the term "brokeback," 斷背 duanbei, due to the success of Chinese director [[Ang Lee]]'s film [[Brokeback Mountain]].). The relationships were marked by differences in age and social position. However, the instances of same-sex affection and sexual interactions described in the ''[[Cao Xueqin|Hong Lou Meng]]'' (''Dream of the Red Chamber,'' or ''Story of the Stone'') seem as familiar to observers in the present as do equivalent stories of romances between heterosexuals during the same period.
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In recent years, many liberal Christians have come around to accept the view that homosexuality is an innate condition rather than a moral fault. Some major denominations, such as the [[United Church of Christ]], the [[Unitarian Church]] and some [[Presbyterian]] and [[Anglican]] churches welcome members regardless of sexual orientation, and some ministers in these churches even perform same-sex marriages. There is even a new denomination, the [[Metropolitan Community Church]], that ministers specifically to the gay community.  
  
[[Homosexuality in Japan#Ancient Japan|Homosexuality in Japan]], variously known as [[shudo]] or [[nanshoku]], terms influenced by Chinese literature, has been documented for over one thousand years and was an integral part of [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] monastic life and the [[samurai]] tradition. This same-sex love culture gave rise to strong traditions of [[Ukyio-e|painting]] and literature documenting and celebrating such relationships.
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Christians in these churches have developed doctrinal stances that support open ministries to homosexuals. Taking an historicist interpretation of scripture, they conclude that past scriptural prohibitions must give way to the modern understanding of  homosexuality as the outworking of an orientation. Some consider that scripture has a thoroughgoing [[patriarchy|patriarchal]] bias, which expresses itself in a disapproval of all gender-transgressive sexual practices; present-day readings must account for this. The inclusion of the "unclean" Gentiles in the early Church is sometimes said to be a model for the inclusion of other peoples called "unclean" today. Above all, these churches regard homosexuals as first and foremost human beings created in the [[image of God]], and take Jesus' imperative to seek and find the "lost sheep" as requiring ministry to this group that the church has disregarded for so long.
  
Similarly, in [[Thailand]], ''[[Kathoey]]'', or "ladyboys," have been a feature of Thai society for many centuries, and Thai kings had male as well as female lovers. ''Kathoey'' are men who dress as women. They are generally accepted by society, and Thailand has never had legal prohibitions against homosexuality or homosexual behavior. The teachings of [[Buddhism]], dominant in Thai society, were accepting of a third gender designation.
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Ordination of gay clergy, however, has led to heated controversy, as many are not willing to accept homosexuals in a position of spiritual authority. The [[Anglican Communion]] encountered discord that caused a rift between African (except Southern Africa) and Asian Anglican churches on the one hand and North American churches on the other when some American and Canadian churches openly ordained gay clergy and began blessing same-sex unions.
  
===Europe===
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===Islam===
[[Image:Romanmanandyouth.jpg|thumb|Roman man and youth in bed. Dated ca. 30 [[Anno Domini|AD]] (1st century). Found in Estepa, [[Spain]]]]
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<blockquote>What! Of all creatures do ye come unto the males, and leave the wives your Lord created for you? Nay, but ye are froward (disobedient) folk. ([[Qur'an]] 26:165-166)</blockquote>
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All major [[Islam]]ic sects disapprove of homosexuality, and same-sex intercourse is an offense punishable by [[execution]] in six Muslim nations: [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Iran]], [[Mauritania]], [[Sudan]], [[Somalia]], and [[Yemen]].<ref>[https://ilga.org/maps-sexual-orientation-laws Sexual Orientation Laws] ''International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association'' (ILGA World). Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> In Muslim nations such as [[Bahrain]], [[Qatar]], [[Algeria]], [[Pakistan]] the [[Maldives]], and [[Malaysia]], homosexuality is punished with [[prison]], fines or [[corporal punishment]].  
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Islam tolerates same-sex desires by viewing them as a temptation; sexual relations, however, are seen as a transgression of the natural role and aim of sexual activity.<ref>[https://www.alinaam.co.za/homos/ Homosexuality in the Light of Islam]. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> Islamic teachings (in the ''[[hadith]]'' tradition) presume same-sex attraction, extol abstention, and (in the [[Qur'an]]) condemn consummation. Islamic law governs the physical actions, not a person's inner thoughts and feelings. Thus, same-sex intercourse is punishable under the Sharia, but homosexuality as an ''attraction'' is not against the [[Sharia]]. Indeed, the Qur'an's realism about pederastic impulses is seen in its description of the rewards in Paradise for those who abstain from such impulses; there believers are attended by perpetually young virgin lovers, women and men, ''[[houri]]'' and ''[[ghilman]]'' (56.37).
  
{{Main|Pederasty in ancient Greece|Philosophy of Greek pederasty}}
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===Hinduism===
{{See also|Philosophy of Greek pederasty|Pederasty}}
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Among the religions that originated in [[India]], including [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]], and [[Sikhism]], teachings regarding homosexuality are less clear than among the Abrahamic traditions. However, most contemporary religious authorities view homosexuality negatively, and when it is discussed, it is discouraged or actively forbidden.
  
The earliest western documents (in the form of literary works, art objects, as well as [[Greek mythology|mythographic materials]]) concerning same-sex relationships are derived from [[Ancient Greece]]. They depict a world in which relationships with women and relationships with youths were the essential foundation of a normal man's love life. Same-sex relationships were a social institution variously constructed over time and from one city to another. The practice, a system of relationships between an adult male and an adolescent coming of age, was often valued for its pedagogic benefits and as a means of population control, and occasionally blamed for causing disorder. [[Plato]] praised its benefits in his early writings{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, but in his late works proposed its prohibition, laying out a strategy which uncannily predicts the path by which same-sex love was eventually driven underground.{{or}}
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Sexuality is rarely discussed openly in Hindu society, and homosexuality is largely a taboo subject—especially among the strongly religious. The ancient Hindu law codes such as the ''Manu Smriti'' refer to both female and male homosexuality as a punishable crime.<ref>For example, [http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/manu/manu08.htm ''Manu Smriti'' chapter 8], verse 369, 370. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
  
[[Roman Empire|Roman emperor]] [[Hadrian]] (pagan) allegedly practiced homosexuality himself.
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Several Hindu texts, such as ''Manu Smriti''<ref>''Manu Smriti,'' 3.49</ref> and ''Sushruta Samhita'', assert that some people are born with either mixed male and female natures, or sexually [[neuter]], as a matter of natural biology. Such people worked as [[hairdressing|hairdressers]], flower-sellers, servants, [[massage|masseurs]], and [[prostitution|prostitutes]]. Today, many people of this "third gender" (''[[Hijra (India)|hijras]]'') live throughout India, mostly on the margins of society, and many still work in prostitution, or live as beggars.
  
The [[Roman Empire|Roman]] (Christian) emperor [[Theodosius I]] decreed a law, on August 6th, 390, condemning passive homosexual people to be burned at the stake. [[Justinian I|Justinian]], towards the end of his reign, expanded the proscription to the active partner as well (in 558) warning that such conduct can lead to the destruction of cities through the "wrath of God." Notwithstanding these regulations, taxes on [[brothels]] of boys available for homosexual sex continued to be collected until the end of the reign of [[Anastasius I (emperor)|Anastasius I]] in 518.
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===Buddhism===
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[[Buddhism]] discourages sexual behavior that would disturb the equanimity of the practitioner or of others, and Buddhism is often characterized as distrustful of sensual enjoyment in general.<ref>Peter Anthony Jackson, [http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-EPT/anth.htm Thai Buddhist Accounts of Male Homosexuality and AIDS in the 1980s] ''The Australian Journal of Anthropology'' 6(3) (1995):140-153. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> Accordingly, homosexual conduct and gender variance are seen as obstacles to spiritual progress in most schools of Buddhism.  
  
During the [[Renaissance]], rich cities in northern Italy, [[Florence]] and [[Venice]] in particular, were renowned for their widespread practice of same-sex love, engaged in by a considerable part of the male (elite) population and constructed along the classical pattern of Greece and Rome. <ref>Rocke, Michael, (1996), ''Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and male Culture in Renaissance Florence'', ISBN 0-195122-92-5</ref> <ref>Ruggiero, Guido, (1985), ''The Boundaries of Eros'', ISBN 0-195034-65-1</ref> But even as the majority of the male population was engaging in same-sex relationships, the authorities, under the aegis of the [[Officers of the Night]] court, were prosecuting, fining, and imprisoning a good portion of that population. The eclipse of this period of relative artistic and erotic freedom was precipitated by the rise to power of the moralizing monk [[Girolamo Savonarola]]. In northern Europe the artistic discourse on sodomy was turned against its proponents by artists such as [[Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn|Rembrandt]], who in his [[Ganymede (mythology)#Renaissance and Baroque Ganymede|"Rape of Ganymede"]] no longer depicted [[Ganymede (mythology)|Ganymede]] as a willing youth, but as a squalling baby attacked by a rapacious bird of prey.  
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References to ''pandaka,'' a deviant sex/gender category that is usually interpreted to include homosexual males, can be found throughout the [[Pali canon]].<ref>Leonard Zwilling, "Homosexuality As Seen In Indian Buddhist Texts," in Jose Ignacio Cabezon, (ed.), ''Buddhism, Sexuality & Gender'' (State University of New York Press, 1992), 203-214.</ref> In [[Buddhaghosa]]'s ''Samantapasadika,'' they are described as being filled with defiled passions and insatiable lusts, and are dominated by their libido. The ''[[Abhidhamma]]'' states that a ''pandaka'' cannot achieve [[enlightenment]] in his or her own lifetime, but must wait for rebirth as a normal man or woman.  
  
The relationships of socially prominent figures, such as King James I and the Duke of Buckingham, served to highlight the issue, including in anonymously authored street pamphlets: "The world is chang'd I know not how, For men Kiss Men, not Women now;...Of J. the First and Buckingham: He, true it is, his Wives Embraces fled, To slabber his lov'd Ganimede;" (''Mundus Foppensis, or The Fop Display'd'', 1691.)
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Historically, in Japanese [[Shingon Buddhism]], relationships between male priests and young male acolytes were the norm, especially during the [[Edo period]].
  
1723 in England saw publication of ''Love Letters Between a Certain Late Nobleman and the famous Mr Wilson.'', which some modern scholars presume to be a novel. The 1749 edition of [[John Cleland]]'s popular novel [[Fanny Hill]] includes a homosexual scene, but this was removed in its 1750 edition. Also in 1749 the earliest extended and serious defense of homosexuality in English ''Ancient and Modern Pederasty Investigated and Exemplified'', written by [[Thomas Cannon]], was published, but was suppressed almost immediately. It includes the passage: ""Unnatural Desire is a Contradiction in Terms; downright Nonsense. Desire is an amatory Impulse of the inmost human Parts." <ref>Gladfelder, Hal (May 2006) ''In Search of Lost Texts: Thomas Cannon's 'Ancient and Modern Pederasty Investigated and Exemplified"'', Institute of Historical Research </ref> Around 1785 [[Jeremy Bentham]] wrote another defense, but this was not published until 1978. <ref> Journal of Homosexuality (ISSN 0091-8369) Volume: 3 Issue: 4 , Volume: 4 Issue: 1 </ref>Executions for sodomy continued in the Netherlands until 1803, and in England until 1835.  
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The third of the [[Buddhism#The Five Precepts|Five Precepts]] of Buddhism states that one is to refrain from [[sexual misconduct]]; this precept is usually understood to include homosexuality. The [[Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama|Dalai Lama]] interprets sexual misconduct to include lesbian and gay sex, and indeed any sex other than penis-vagina intercourse, including oral sex, anal sex, and masturbation, or other sexual activity with the hand. Nevertheless, he spoke out strongly against discrimination and violence against lesbians and gays, urging "respect, compassion, and full human rights for all."<ref>Dennis Conkin, [https://gaytibet.blogspot.com/2006/11/his-holiness-dalai-lama-speaks-on-gay.html His Holiness the Dalai Lama Speaks on Gay matters]. June 19, 1997. ''quietmountain.org''. Retrieved August 9, 2007.</ref> On the other hand, some contemporary Western Buddhists and hold very accepting views of lesbians and gays, and may even consecrate [[same-sex marriage]]s.
  
Between 1864 and 1880 [[Karl Heinrich Ulrichs]] published a series of twelve tracts, which he collectively titled ''Research on the Riddle of Man-Manly Love.'' In 1867 he became the first self-proclaimed homosexual person to speak out publicly in defense of homosexuality when he pleaded at the Congress of German Jurists in Munich for a resolution urging the repeal of anti-homosexual laws.
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===Sikhism===
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[[Sikhism|Sikh]] (Punjabi) society is conservative and intoleration of homosexual behavior. In 2005, the world's highest Sikh religious authority described homosexuality as "against the Sikh religion and the Sikh code of conduct and totally against the laws of nature," and called on Sikhs to support laws against homosexuality.<ref>[https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/world-sikh-group-against-gay-marriage-bill-1.536239 World Sikh group against gay marriage bill] ''CBC News'', March 29, 2005. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref>
  
Sir [[Richard Francis Burton]]'s ''Terminal Essay, Part IV/D'' appendix in his translation of ''The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night'' (1885-6) provided an effusive overview of homosexuality in the middle east and tropics. ''Sexual Inversion'' by [[Havelock Ellis]], published in 1896 challenged theories that homosexuality was abnormal, as well as stereotypes, and insisted on the ubiquity of homosexuality and its association with intellectual and artistic achievement. Appendix A included ''A Problem in Greek Ethics'' by [[John Addington Symonds]], which had been privately distributed in 1883. Beginning in 1894 with ''Homogenic Love'', Socialist activist and poet [[Edward Carpenter]] wrote a string of pro-homosexual articles and pamphlets, and  'came out' in 1916 in his book ''My Days and Dreams''.
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===Jainism===
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Chastity is one of the five [[virtue]]s in the fundamental ethical code of [[Jainism]]. For [[laity|laypersons]], the only appropriate avenue for sexuality is within marriage, and homosexuality is believed to lead to negative [[karma]].<ref>[https://www.beliefnet.com/faiths/2001/06/what-jains-believe.aspx What Jains believe]. ''belief.net''. Retrieved January 25, 2021.</ref> A modern Jain authority wrote in 2004 that homosexuality and [[transvestism]] "stain one's thoughts and feelings" because they involve sexual passion.<ref>Duli Chandra Jain, "Answers To Some Frequently Asked Questions," in ''Religious Ethics: A Sourcebook'' edited by Arthur B. Dobrin, (Mumbai: Hindi Granth Karyalaya, 2004, ISBN 8188769010).</ref>
  
In 1900, [[Elisar von Kupffer]] published an anthology of homosexual literature from antiquity to his own time, ''[[Lieblingsminne und Freundesliebe in der Weltliteratur]]''. His aim was to broaden the public perspective of homosexuality beyond it being viewed simply as a medical or biological issue, but also as an ethical and cultural one.
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===Confucianism===
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The [[Confucianism|Confucian]] moral code emphasizes a person's responsibility to family and society. Confucians are expected to get married and have children; this is their responsibility to their parents and their ancestors. A male's duty is to have male children to pass on his family name; a female's duty is to bear her husband male children to carry on his family name. Homosexuality cannot result in reproduction; this is the main reason why Confucians disapprove of it. However, there are records of married men who took male lovers, which was seen as a private matter.  
  
===Middle East, South and Central Asia===
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Confucianism stresses an individual's obligations of [[filial piety]] to his parents and [[loyalty]] to his country. If a one's parents forbade one from engaging in homosexuality, or if the state outlawed homosexuality (as was the case in [[China]] between 1740 and 1997), one would be expected to comply with these orders.
[[Image:Samarkand A group of musicians playing for a bacha dancing boy.jpg|thumb|''Dance of a [[bacchá]] (dancing boy)''<br/> [[Samarkand]], (ca 1905 - 1915), photo [[Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii]]. [[Library of Congress]], Washington, DC.]]
 
  
{{Main|Homosexuality and Islam}}
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===Daoism===
{{Main|Homosexuality in India}}
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[[Daoism]] stresses the relationship between [[yin and yang]]: two opposing forces which maintain harmony through balance. The Daoist tradition holds that males need the energies of females, and vice versa, in order to bring about balance, completion, and transformation. Heterosexual relations is seen as the physical and emotional embodiment of the harmonious balance between yin and yang. Homosexuality is seen as the union of two yins or two yangs, and therefore unbalanced; hence it does not lead to human fulfillment.<ref>Sandra Wawrytko, "Homosexuality and Chinese and Japanese Religions" in ''Homosexuality and World Religions,'' edited by Arlene Swidler, (London: Trinity Press International, 1993. ISBN 156338051X).</ref>
{{See also|Tellak}}
 
Among many [[Middle East|Middle-Eastern]] Muslim cultures, homosexual practices were widespread and public. Persian poets, such as [[Attar]] (d. 1220), [[Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi|Rumi]] (d. 1273), [[Saadi|Sa’di]] (d. 1291), [[Hafez]] (d. 1389), and [[Jami]] (d. 1492), wrote poems replete with homoerotic allusions. Recent work in [[queer studies]] suggests that while the visibility of such relationships has been much reduced, their frequency has not. The two most commonly documented forms were commercial sex with [[transgender]] males or males enacting transgender roles exemplified by the [[köçek]]s and the [[bacchá]]s, and [[Sufi]] spiritual practices in which the practitioner crossed over from the idealized chaste form of the practice to one in which the desire is consummated.
 
  
In Persia homosexuality and homoerotic expressions were tolerated in numerous public places, from monasteries and seminaries to taverns, military camps, bathhouses, and coffee houses. In the early [[Safavids|Safavid]] era (1501-1723), male houses of prostitution (''amrad khane'') were legally recognized and paid taxes.
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== Notes ==
 
 
A rich tradition of art and literature sprang up, constructing Middle Eastern homosexuality in ways analogous to the ancient tradition of male love in which [[Ganymede (mythology)|Ganymede]], cup-bearer to the gods, symbolized the ideal boyfriend. Muslim &mdash; often [[Sufi]] &mdash; poets in medieval [[Arab]] lands and in [[Iran|Persia]] wrote odes to the beautiful Christian wine boys who, they claimed, served them in the taverns and shared their beds at night. In many areas the practice survived into modern times (as documented by [[Richard Francis Burton]], [[André Gide]], and others).
 
 
 
In [[Central Asia]], on the [[Silk Route]], the two traditions of the east and the west met, and gave rise to a strong local culture of same-sex love. In the [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]-speaking areas, one manifestation of this were the [[bacchá]], adolescent or adolescent-seeming male entertainers and sex workers. In other areas male love continues to surface despite efforts to keep it quiet. After the American invasion of Afghanistan, Central Asian same-sex love customs in which adult men take on adolescent lovers were widely reported.
 
 
 
Other forms are less well documented. It is reported that in the Oasis of [[Siwa]], boy marriages were the norm until the middle of the twentieth century, a practice which was coupled with a minimum age for heterosexual marriage of forty for the men, a measure presumed to have been taken to avoid overpopulation. Finally, sexual relations between older and younger boys are said to be frequent in the Middle East as well as in the [[Maghreb]].
 
 
 
The prevailing pattern of same-sex relationships in the temperate and sub-tropical zone stretching from Northern India to the Western Sahara is one in which the relationships were &mdash; and are &mdash; either gender-structured or age-structured or both. In recent years, egalitarian relationships modeled on the western pattern have become more frequent, though they remain rare.
 
 
 
===South Pacific===
 
In many societies of [[Melanesia]] same-sex relationships are an integral part of the culture. Traditional Melanesian insemination rituals also existed where a boy, upon reaching a certain age would be paired with an older adolescent who would become his mentor and whom he would ritually fellate over a number of years in order to develop his own masculinity. In certain tribes of [[Papua New Guinea]], for example, it is considered a normal ritual responsibility for a boy to have a relationship in order to accomplish his ascent into manhood. Many Melanesian societies, however, have become hostile towards same-sex relationships since the introduction of [[Christianity]] by [[European]] [[missionaries]].
 
 
 
===Modern Developments===
 
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Generobinsonconsecration.jpg|thumb|Consecration of the [[Anglican Communion]]'s first openly noncelibate gay Bishop, [[Gene Robinson]] on November 2, 2003, in [[Durham, New Hampshire]], [[United States]].]] —>
 
 
 
Although homosexual acts were decriminalized in some parts of the [[Western world]], such as in [[Gay rights in Denmark|Denmark]] in 1933, in [[Gay rights in Sweden|Sweden]] in 1944, in the [[Gay rights in the United Kingdom|United Kingdom]] in 1967, and in [[Gay rights in Canada|Canada]] in 1969, it was not until the mid-1970s that the [[gay community]] first began to achieve actual, though limited, [[civil rights]] in some [[developed countries]].  A turning point was reached in 1973 when, in a vote decided by a plurality of the membership, the [[American Psychiatric Association]] removed homosexuality from the [[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders]], thus negating its previous definition of homosexuality as a clinical [[mental disorder]].  In 1977, [[Quebec]] became the first state-level jurisdiction in the world to prohibit [[discrimination]] on the grounds of [[sexual orientation]]. 
 
 
 
Since the 1960s, in part due to their history of shared oppression, many [[LGBT]] people in the West, particularly those in major metropolitan areas, have developed a so-called [[Queer culture|gay culture]]. To many, gay culture is exemplified by the [[gay pride]] movement, with annual parades and displays of rainbow flags.  Yet not all LGBT people choose to participate in "queer culture," and many gay men and women specifically decline to do so.  To some it seems to be a frivolous display, perpetuating gay stereotypes.  To some others, the gay culture represents [[heterophobia]] and is scorned as widening the gulf between gay and straight people.
 
 
 
With the outbreak of [[AIDS]] in the early 1980s, many LGBT groups and individuals organized campaigns to promote efforts in AIDS education, prevention, research, and patient support, and community outreach, as well as to demand government support for these programs.  [[Gay Men's Health Crisis]], [[Project Inform]], and [[ACT UP]] are some notable American examples of the LGBT community's response to the AIDS crisis. 
 
 
 
The bewildering death toll wrought by [[AIDS]] epidemic at first seemed to slow the progress of the [[gay rights]] movement, but in time it galvanized some parts of the LGBT community into community service and political action, and challenged the heterosexual community to respond compassionately.  Major American motion pictures from this period that dramatized the response of individuals and communities to the AIDS crisis include ''[[An Early Frost]]'' (1985), ''[[Longtime Companion]]'' (1990), ''[[And the Band Played On]]'' (1993), ''[[Philadelphia]]'' (1993), and ''[[Common Threads:  Stories from the Quilt]]'' (1989), the last referring to the [[NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt]], last displayed in its entirety on [[National Mall|the Mall]] in [[Washington, D.C.]], in 1996.
 
 
 
During the 1980s and 1990s, most [[developed countries]], with the notable exception of the [[United States of America]],  enacted laws decriminalizing homosexual behavior and prohibiting discrimination against lesbians and gays in employment, housing, and services.  Yet as LGBT people slowly gained legal protection and social acceptance, [[gay bashing]] and [[hate crimes]] also increased due to [[homophobia]].  For some notable incidents of this phenomenon, see [[Violence against gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and the transgendered]].
 
 
 
====Marriage and Civil Unions====
 
Legislation designed to create provisions for gay marriage in a number of countries has polarized international opinion and led to many well-publicized political debates and court battles in a number of countries. By 2006 the [[Same-sex marriage in the Netherlands|Netherlands]], [[Same-sex marriage in Belgium|Belgium]], [[Same-sex marriage in Spain|Spain]], [[Same-sex marriage in Canada|Canada]] and [[Same-sex marriage in South Africa|South Africa]] had legalized [[same-sex marriage]]; in the [[same-sex marriage in the United States|United States]], only [[Same-sex marriage in Massachusetts|Massachusetts]] had legalized gay marriage while the states of [[Civil unions in Vermont|Vermont]], [[Civil unions in Connecticut|Connecticut]], and [[Civil unions in New Jersey|New Jersey]] allowed [[civil unions]].<ref>{{cite news
 
  | title =Gay marriage around the globe
 
  | publisher =BBC News
 
  | date =22 December 2005
 
  | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4081999.stm
 
  | accessdate =2006-12-29
 
  | quote =The BBC News website looks at where same-sex unions have been given the go-ahead, and the often intense debates over them.}}</ref>  Maine, California, and Hawaii, as well as the District of Columbia, offer [[domestic partnerships]].
 
 
 
Other countries, including the majority of [[Europe]]an nations, have enacted laws allowing [[civil unions]], designed to give gay couples similar rights as married couples concerning legal issues such as inheritance and immigration. Numerous [[Scandinavia]]n countries have had [[domestic partnership]] laws on the books since the late 1980s. In the United States, the framing of the debate around [[marriage]] rather than civil unions may have been partly responsible for the defeat of a number of measures by sparking opposition from many [[Conservatism|conservative]] and religious groups. For example, in [[domestic partnership in California|California]], Governor [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]] has stated that he supports full legal protection for gay couples - but that the issue of gay marriage is best decided by the people or in the courts.<ref>{{cite news
 
  | title =California gay weddings face veto
 
  | publisher =BBC News
 
  | date =8 September 2005
 
  | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4224832.stm
 
  | accessdate =2006-12-29
 
  | quote =California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has confirmed he will veto a bill endorsing gay marriages.}}</ref>
 
 
 
In Asia, the conflict between homoerotic tradition and a resurgent Islamic fundamentalism continues. Liaquat Ali, a 42 year old [[Afghanistan|Afghan]] refugee, and Markeen Afridi a 16 year old [[Pakistan|Pakistani]] boy, reportedly fell in love and got married in a very public ceremony in October of 2005. <ref>[http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/afghan-tribesman-faces-death-for-wedding-to-teenage-boy/2005/10/06/1128562943177.html# Afghan tribesman faces death for wedding to teenage boy], Peter Foster, ''Sydney Morning Herald'', October 7, 2005</ref> <ref>[http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_6-10-2005_pg1_5 Man weds boy in Khyber Agency], ''Daily Times'', October 6, 2005</ref> There are efforts to refute the original reports which were authored by a reporter from the tribe where the wedding occurred. <ref>[http://www.khyber.org/articles/2005/GayMarriageReportFabricated.shtml Gay Marriage Report Fabricated], Kashmir Khan Afridi</ref>.
 
 
 
For many traditionalists, and in the light of unfavorable views by certain religions, objections have been raised, e.g. arguing that marriage is a specific institution designed as a foundation for parenthood, which an infertile union cannot qualify for. The [[American Psychological Association]] has largely discredited such arguments (C. Patterson, 1995) and found that the majority of unbiased academic studies of gay and lesbian parents contradict these beliefs.
 
 
 
====Parenthood====
 
[[Adoption by same-sex couples]] remains a contentious issue in many countries, and part of the platform of many gay rights organizations.
 
 
 
====Political developments====
 
Publicly gay politicians have attained numerous government posts, even in countries that had [[sodomy law]]s or outright [[History of gays in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust|mass murder of gays]] in their recent past.
 
 
 
Gay British politicians include former UK [[Cabinet|Cabinet ministers]] [[Chris Smith, Baron Smith of Finsbury|Chris Smith]] (now Lord Smith of Finsbury who is also a rare example of an openly HIV positive statesman) and [[Nick Brown]], and, most famously, [[Peter Mandelson]], a [[European Commission|European Commissioner]] and close friend of Tony Blair. Openly gay Per-Kristian Foss was the Norwegian minister of finance until September of 2005.
 
 
 
====Religious developments====
 
{{seealso|Sexual orientation|Environment, choice, and sexual orientation|Ex-gay|Genetics and sexual orientation|Anti-gay slogan}}
 
The overall trend of greater acceptance of gay men and women in the latter part of the 20th century was not limited to [[secular]] institutions; it was also seen in some [[Religion and homosexuality|religious]] institutions. [[Reform Judaism]], the largest branch of [[Judaism]] outside [[Israel]] has begun to facilitate religious [[same-sex marriages|weddings]] for gay adherents in their synagogues. In 2005, the [[United Church of Christ]] became the largest Christian denomination in the United States to formally endorse same-sex marriage. 
 
 
 
On the other hand, the [[Anglican Communion]] encountered discord that caused a rift between the African (except Southern Africa) and Asian Anglican churches on the one hand and North American churches on the other when American and Canadian churches openly ordained gay clergy and began blessing same-sex unions. Other Churches such as the [[Methodist Church]] had experienced trials of gay clergy who some claimed were a violation of religious principles resulting in mixed verdicts dependent on geography.
 
 
 
These developments have been accompanied by a response from certain conservative religious organizations, especially in the United States. In various instances, this movement has succeeded in overturning some of the aforementioned legislation and has had an influence on academia. In late 2005, Haworth Press withdrew from publication a volume on homosexuality in classical antiquity titled ''Same-Sex Desire and Love in Greco-Roman Antiquity and in the Classical Tradition of the West.'' This was in response to criticism from American conservative groups which objected to the discussion of positive aspects of classical pederasty, as well as to a chapter by the American academic Bruce Rind which was branded by the critics as advocating pedophilia. The publisher, in a letter to the editors, exonerated Rind from the accusation and conceded that his article was sound, but stood by its decision to withdraw it "to avoid negative press" and "economic repercussions." [http://thechronicleherald.ca/NovaScotia/456746.html Article in the Halifax ''The Chronicle Herald'']
 
 
 
Fundamentalist religious organizations are also attempting to block the progress of equal rights through corporate boycotts. In spring of 2005, the "American Family Association" threatened a boycott of [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]] products to protest Ford's perceived support of "the homosexual agenda and homosexual marriage."{{Fact|date=February 2007}} After meeting with representatives of the group, Ford announced it was curtailing ads in a number of major gay publications (thus depriving them of a major source of income), an action it claimed to be determined not by cultural but by "cost-cutting" factors. That statement was contradicted by the AFA, which claimed it had a "good faith agreement" that Ford would cease such ads. Soon afterwards, as a result of a strong outcry from the gay community, Ford backtracked and announced it would continue ads in gay publications, in response to which the AFA denounced Ford for "violating" the agreement, and renewed threats of a boycott. [http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2005/ford_gay_ads04.html Anti-Gay Group Renews Ford Boycott Threat]
 
 
 
The existence of ''sexual orientation'' (in the sense of an underlying same-sex, opposite-sex, dual-sex, or other spontaneous attraction) and its immutability has been contested by some religiously inspired organizations. Several religious groups have organized [[ex-gay]] groups to help individuals who are unhappy being gay (ego-dystonic homosexuality).
 
 
 
==Art and literature==
 
{{main|Homoeroticism}}
 
 
 
[[Image:Love play in China - wiki.jpg|thumb|''Young men sipping tea, reading poetry, and making love''<br/> Individual panel from a hand scroll on homosexual themes, paint on silk; [[China]], [[Qing]] dynasty (18th-19th c.); [[Kinsey Institute]], Bloomington, Indiana]]
 
 
 
One of the main ways in which the record of same-sex love has been preserved is through [[literature]] and [[art]]. Typically through history, male homoeroticism has been the work of gay male artists, while lesbian eroticism has more often been the work of heterosexual men, although exceptions exist, especially in poetry and fiction.
 
 
 
Male homoerotic sensibilities are visible in the foundations of art in the west, to the extent that those roots can be traced back to the [[ancient Greeks]]. [[Homer]]'s ''[[Iliad]]'' is considered to have the love between two men as its central feature, a view held since antiquity. [[Plato]]'s [[Symposium]] also gives readers commentary on the subject, at one point putting forth the claim that male homosexual love is superior to heterosexual love.
 
 
 
The European tradition of homoeroticism was continued throughout the ages in the works of [[Leonardo da Vinci]] and [[Michelangelo]]. Since the Renaissance, both male and female homoeroticism has remained a common theme in the visual arts of the west.
 
 
 
In Islamic societies homoeroticism was present in the work of such writers as [[Abu Nuwas]] and [[Omar Khayyam]]. ''[[The Tale of Genji]]'', called the "world's first real novel," fostered this tradition in [[Japan]], as did the Chinese literary tradition in works such as [[Homosexuality in China#Same-sex love in literature|Bian er Zhai]] and Jin Ping Mei. Today, the Japanese [[anime]] subgenre [[yaoi]] centers on male homosexuality. Japan is unusual in that the culture's male homoerotic art has typically been the work of female artists, mirroring the case of lesbian eroticism in western art.
 
 
 
In the twentieth century, entertainers such as [[Noel Coward]], [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]], [[kd lang]], and [[David Bowie]] have brought homoeroticism into the field of western popular music. It is through these and other modern songwriters and poets that art by lesbians, rather than erotic art by men with lesbian themes, has had its greatest cultural impact in the West since the ancient Greek poet [[Sappho]].
 
 
 
In the 1990s, a number of American television comedies began to feature gay and lesbian characters. The [[1997 in television|1997]] [[Coming out|coming-out]] of comedian [[Ellen DeGeneres]] on her show ''[[Ellen (TV series)|Ellen]]'' was front-page news in America and brought the show its highest ratings. However, public interest in the show swiftly declined after this, and the show was cancelled after one more season. Immediately afterward ''[[Will & Grace]]'', which ran from [[1998 in television|1998]] to [[2005 in television|2005]] on [[NBC]], became the most successful series to focus on homosexuality.
 
 
 
Playwrights have penned such popular homoerotic works as [[Tennessee Williams]]'s ''[[Cat on a Hot Tin Roof]]'' and [[Tony Kushner]]'s ''[[Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes|Angels In America]]''. Homosexuality has also been a frequent theme in [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] musicals, such as ''[[A Chorus Line]]'' and ''[[Rent (musical)|Rent]]''. In [[2005 in film|2005]], the gay romantic film ''[[Brokeback Mountain]]'' was a financial and critical success internationally. Unlike most gay film characters, both the film's lovers were "[[Butch and femme|butch]]." The movie's success was considered a milestone in the public acceptance of the [[Gay rights in the United States|American gay rights movement]].
 
 
 
== Footnotes ==
 
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
 
 
<references />
 
<references />
<!--
 
No longer referenced: # {{note|sex_survey}} [http://cloud9.norc.uchicago.edu/faqs/sex.htm The National Health and Social Life Survey ("The Sex Survey")]
 
No longer referenced: # {{note|army_pride}} [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/4189634.stm "Army marches with Pride parade"], ''BBC News'', August 27, 2004—>
 
</div>
 
  
== Bibliography ==
+
==References==
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
 
<!-- author, title, publisher date, ISBN —>
 
=== Books ===
 
* Kenneth J. Dover, ''Greek Homosexuality'', , Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd. 1979, ISBN 0-674-36261-6 (hardcover), ISBN 0-674-36270-5 (paperback)
 
* John d'Emilio, ''Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities: The Making of a Homosexual Minority in the United States, 1940-1970'', [[University of Chicago Press]] 1983, ISBN 0226142655
 
* Norman Roth. ''The care and feeding of gazelles - Medieval Arabic and Hebrew love poetry.'' IN: Lazar & Lacy. ''Poetics of Love in the Middle Ages'', George Mason University Press 1989, ISBN 0913969257
 
<!-- 1990s —>
 
* Allan Bérubé, ''Coming out under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two'', New York: MacMillan 1990, ISBN 0029031001
 
* Bret Hinsch, ''Passions of the Cut Sleeve: The Male Homosexual Tradition in China'', The University of California Press, 1990, ISBN 0-520-06720-7
 
* Dynes, Wayne R. (ed.) ''The Encyclopedia of Homosexuality'' New York and London, Garland Publishing 1990, ISBN 0824065441
 
* Foucault, Michel, ''The History of Sexuality'' vol. 1: ''An Introduction'', p.43. Trans. Robert Hurley. New York: Vintage 1990
 
* George Rousseau, ''Perilous Enlightenment:  Pre- and Post-Modern Discourses—Sexual, Historical'', Manchester University Press 1991, ISBN 0719033012
 
*Lillian Faderman, ''Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth Century America'', Penguin 1992
 
* Arno Schmitt & Jehoeda Sofer (eds). ''Sexuality and Eroticism Among Males in Moslem Societies''. Haworth Press, 1992
 
* George Chauncey, ''Gay New York: Gender Urban Culture and the Making of the Gay Male World'', New York: Basic Books, 1994
 
* Juanita Ramos , ''Compañeras: Latina Lesbians : An Anthology'', Routledge 1994
 
* Johansson, Warren and Percy, William A., (1994), ''Outing: Shattering the Conspiracy of Silence,'' Harrington Park Press
 
* Robert T. Michael, John H. Gagnon, Edward O. Laumann, and Gina Kolata. Sex in America: A definitive survey. Boston: Little, Brown, 1995. ISBN 0-316-07524-8
 
* Percy, William A ''Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece.'' University of Illinois Press, 1996
 
* Lester G. Brown, ''Two Spirit People'', 1997, Harrington Park Press, ISBN 1-56023-089-4
 
* Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe, ''Boy Wives and Female Husbands: Studies of African Homosexualities,'' 1998, ISBN 0-312-21216-X.
 
* Bullough et al. (eds.) (1996). Handbook of Medieval Sexuality. Garland Publishing. ISBN 0-8153-1287-3.
 
*Jennifer Terry, ''An American Obsession: Science, Medicine, and Homosexuality in Modern Society'', University of Chicago Press 1999, ISBN 0-226-79367-2
 
<!-- 2000s —>
 
* Bullough, Vern L. ''Before Stonewall: Activists for Gay and Lesbian Rights in Historical Context,'' Harrington Park Press 2002
 
*Ruth Vanita, ''Queering India: Same-Sex Love and Eroticism in Indian Culture and Society'', Routledge 2002
 
* Joanne Meyers, ''Historical Dictionary of the Lesbian Liberation Movement: Still the Rage'', Scarecrow Press 2003
 
*David K. Johnson, ''The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government'', Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004
 
  
=== Journal articles ===
+
*Bahnsen, Greg L. ''Homosexuality: A Biblical View.'' Baker Pub Group, 1978. ISBN 0801007445
* Bowman, Karl M.; Eagle, Bernice ''[http://hearth.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=hearth;idno=4732756_885_001 The Problem of Homosexuality]'', Journal of Social Hygiene 1953
+
*Bell, Alan, and Martin Weinberg. ''Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women.'' New York: Simon and Schuster, 1978.
* Norton, Rictor and Crew, Louis ''[http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~lcrew/pubd/homophobicimagination.html The Homophobic Imagination]'', College English 1974
+
*Bérubé, Allan. ''Coming out under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two.'' New York: MacMillan, 1990. ISBN 0029031001
* Simon LeVay, ''A difference in hypothalamic structure between homosexual and heterosexual men'', Science Magazine 1991
+
*Bethell, Tom, "Kinsey as Pervert" ''American Spectator'' 38 (April 2005): 42-44. {{ISSN|0148-8414}}
* Christopher Bagley and Pierre Tremblay, ''On the Prevalence of Homosexuality and Bisexuality, in a Random Community Survey of 750 Men Aged 18 to 27'', [[Journal of Homosexuality]], Volume 36, Number 2, pages 1-18, 1998
+
*Bieber, Irving, et al. ''Homosexuality: A Psychoanalytic Study of Male Homosexuals.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1962.
 
+
*Boswell, John. ''Christianity, Social Tolerance and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century.'' University Of Chicago Press, 2005. ISBN 0226067114
=== Online articles ===
+
*Brown, Lester G. ''Two Spirit People.'' Harrington Park Press, 1997. ISBN 1560230894
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/55169.stm BBC News (Feb 1998)]: Fingerprints Study
+
*Bullough, Vern. ''Handbook of Medieval Sexuality.'' Routledge, 1999. ISBN 0815336624
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/325979.stm BBC News (Apr 1999)]: Doubt cast on 'gay gene'
+
*Cabezon, Jose Ignacio, (ed.). ''Buddhism, Sexuality & Gender.'' Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1991. ISBN 0791407586
* [http://my.webmd.com/content/article/22/1728_56075?src=Inktomi&condition=Home%20&%20Top%20Stories WebMD (March 2000)]: Pointing the Finger at Androgen as a Cause of Homosexuality
+
*Claussen, Dane S. ''Sex, Religion, Media.'' Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. ISBN 0742515583
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3735668.stm BBC News (Oct 2004)]: Genetics of homosexuality
+
*Cochran, W.G., F. Mosteller, and J.W. Tukey. ''Statistical Problems of the Kinsey Report on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.'' Washington, DC: American Statistical Association, 1954.
* James Davidson, ''[[London Review of Books]]'', 2 June 2005, [http://www.lrb.co.uk/v27/n11/davi02_.html "Mr and Mr and Mrs and Mrs"] - detailed review of ''The Friend'', by Alan Bray, a history of same-sex marriage and other same-sex formal bonds
+
*Cohen, Richard. ''Coming Out Straight: Understanding and Healing Homosexuality''. Winchester, VA: Oakhill Press, 2006. ISBN 1886939772
</div>
+
*Crompton, Louis. ''Homosexuality and Civilization.'' The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2003. ISBN 067401197X
 
+
*d'Emilio, John. ''Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities: The Making of a Homosexual Minority in the United States, 1940-1970.'' University of Chicago Press, 1983. ISBN 0226142655
 
+
*Dobrin, Arthur B. ed. ''Religious Ethics: A Sourcebook.'’ Mumbai: Hindi Granth Karyalaya, 2004. ISBN 8188769010
 
+
*Dover, Kenneth J. ''Greek Homosexuality.'' Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd., 1979. ISBN 0674362705
===Categories===
+
*Dynes, Wayne R. ''The Encyclopedia of Homosexuality.'' New York and London: Garland Publishing, 1990. ISBN 0824065441
You can find related articles listed on these Wikipedia category pages:
+
*Eckhart, Tolle. ''The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment.'' New World Library, 2004. ISBN 1577314808
* Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT):
+
*Ericksen, Julia A. "With enough cases, why do you need statistics? Revisiting Kinsey's methodology." ''The Journal of Sex Research'' 35(2) (May 1998): 132-140, {{ISSN|0022-4499}}
**[[:Category:LGBT civil rights|LGBT civil rights]]
+
*Fenleib, Marcia R. (ed.). ''Report of the Secretary's Task Force on Youth Suicide''. United States Government Printing Office, 1989. ISBN 0160025087
**[[:Category:LGBT culture|LGBT culture]]
+
*Hinsch, Bret. ''Passions of the Cut Sleeve: The Male Homosexual Tradition in China.'' The University of California Press, 1990. ISBN 0520067207
**[[:Category:LGBT history|LGBT history]]
+
*Kaldera, Raven. ''Hermaphrodeities The Transgender Spirituality Workbook.'' Hubbardston, MA: Asphodel Press, 2009. ISBN 0578007916
**[[:Category:LGBT issues and religion|LGBT issues and religion]]
+
*Kaplan, E. “Homosexuality: A Search for the Ego-Ideal,” ''Archives of General Psychiatry'' 16 (1967): 355–358.
**[[:Category:LGBT organizations|LGBT organizations]]
+
*Kinsey, Alfred C. ''Sexual Behavior in the Human Female.'' (1953). reprint ed. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998. ISBN 0721654509 
**[[:Category:LGBT people|LGBT people]]
+
*Kinsey, Alfred C. ''Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.'' Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998. ISBN 0253334128
*[[:Category:Ex-gay movement|Organizations which advocate changing one's sexual orientation]]
+
*Kuefler, Mathew. ''The Boswell Thesis : Essays on Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality.'' University Of Chicago Press, 2005. ISBN 0226457419
*[[:Category:Same-sex marriage|Same-sex marriage]]
+
*Lang, Sabine, and John L. Vantine, (trans.). ''Men as women, women as men: Changing gender in Native American cultures.'' Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1998. ISBN 0292747004
*[[:Category:Sexual orientation and identity|Sexual orientation and identity]]
+
*Leigh, Barbara, Mark Temple, and Karen Trocki, “The Sexual Behavior of U.S. Adults: Results from a National Survey,” ''American Journal of Public Health'' 83 (10) (October 1993): 11403–11404
*[[:Category:Sexual orientation and science|Sexual orientation and science]], including determinants and demographics of sexual orientation, other scientific studies, and medical opinions
+
*LeVay, Simon. ''The Sexual Brain.'' (Bradford Books) MIT Press, 1993. ISBN 0262620936
*[[:Category:Sexual orientation and society|Sexual orientation and society]], including moral and political debate and social attitudes
+
*McWhirter, David, and Andrew Mattison. ''The Male Couple: How Relationships Develop.'' Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1984. ISBN 0135475635 
 +
*Michael, Robert T., John H. Gagnon, Edward O. Laumann, and Gina Kolata. ''Sex in America: A definitive survey.'' Boston: Little, Brown, 1995. ISBN 0316075248
 +
*Moberly, Elizabeth. ''Homosexuality: A New Christian Ethic.'' (original 1983) reprint Lutterworth Press, 2006. ISBN 0718830652
 +
*Moberly, Elizabeth. ''Psychogenesis: The Early Development of Gender Identity.'' London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983.
 +
*Murray, Stephen O., and Will Roscoe. ''Boy Wives and Female Husbands: Studies of African Homosexualities.'' Palgrave Macmillan, 2001. ISBN 0312238290
 +
*Murray, Stephen O. ''Homosexualities (Worlds of Desire: The Chicago Series on Sexuality, Gender, and Culture).'' University Of Chicago Press, 2002. ISBN 0226551954
 +
*Nicolosi, Joseph. ''Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality: A New Clinical Approach.'' Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson Inc., 1997. ISBN 0765701421
 +
*Rocke, Michael. ''Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and male Culture in Renaissance Florence.'' Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 0195122925
 +
*Roth, Norman. "The care and feeding of gazelles - Medieval Arabic and Hebrew love poetry" in ''Poetics of Love in the Middle Ages.'' George Mason University Press, 1989. ISBN 0913969257
 +
*Rousseau, George. ''Perilous Enlightenment: Pre- and Post-Modern Discourses—Sexual, Historical.'' Manchester University Press, 1991. ISBN 0719033012
 +
*Ruggiero, Guido. ''The Boundaries of Eros: Sex Crime and Sexuality in Renaissance Venice.'' (Studies in the History of Sexuality) Oxford University Press, 1989. ISBN 0195034651
 +
*Saia, Michael. ''Counseling the Homosexual.'' Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1988. ISBN 0871239892
 +
*Sandfort, Theo, Judith Schuyf, Jan Willem Duyvendak (eds.). ''Lesbian and Gay Studies: An Introductory, Interdisciplinary Approach''. SAGE Publications Ltd, 2000. ISBN 978-0761954187
 +
*Swidler, Arlene (ed.). ''Homosexuality and World Religions''. London: Trinity Press International, 1993. ISBN 156338051X
 +
*Terry, Jennifer. ''An American Obsession: Science, Medicine, and Homosexuality in Modern Society.'' University of Chicago Press, 1999. ISBN 0226793672
 +
*van den Aardweg, Gerard. ''Homosexuality and Hope: A Psychologist Talks About Treatment and Change.'' Ann Arbor, MI: Servant Books, 1985. ISBN 0892832657
 +
*Wilson, Glenn, and Qazi Rahman. ''Born Gay?: The Psychobiology of Sex Orientation.'' London: Peter Owen Publishers, 2005. ISBN 0720612233
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{sisterlinks|homosexuality}}
+
All links retrieved December 26, 2020.
* [http://www.apa.org/topics/sbehaviorsub1.html Answers to Your Questions About Sexual Orientation and Homosexuality] The American Psychological Association
+
*[http://www.apa.org/topics/sexuality/orientation.aspx Sexual Orientation & Homosexuality] The American Psychological Association  
* [http://www.ohsu.edu/news/2004/030504sheep.html Biology behind homosexuality in sheep, study confirms]
+
*[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/homosexuality/ Homosexuality] ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''.  
* [http://www.leaderu.com/jhs/reisman.html Kinsey and the Sexual Revolution]
+
*[http://www.religionfacts.com/homosexuality/index.htm Homosexuality in the World's Religions] ''religionfacts.com''.
* [http://www.oneinstitute.org One National Gay & Lesbian Archives]
+
*[https://exgaycalling.com/ Exgay Calling]
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/sexual.htm Sexual Minorities on Community College Campuses]
+
*[https://www.pathinfo.org/ Positive Approaches To Healthy Sexuality] ''PATH''.
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/homosexuality/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Same-sex Orientation]
+
*[http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/sexual.htm Sexual Minorities on Community College Campuses]. ''ERICDigests.org''.  
* [http://usrainbowpages.com/scientificgay/index.php?cat=50 USRainbowPages.com Scientific Gay] Scientific Eye for the Queer Guy
+
*[http://www.galva108.org The Gay and Lesbian Vaishnava Association]  
* [http://www.hiddensexdirectory.com Hidden Sex Directory]
 
* [http://www.gaymilitary.ucsb.edu/Publications/200412_Dalvi-study.pdf European Court of Human Rights Rulings Against Military Forces]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
{{Credits|Homosexuality|118263435|}}
+
{{Credits|Homosexuality|118263435|Religion_and_homosexuality|116497364||}}

Latest revision as of 16:14, 25 January 2023

Lesbian married couple at San Francisco Pride 2004.

Homosexuality refers to sexual interaction between individuals of the same gender. The term "gay" is used predominantly to refer to self-identified homosexual people of either sex. "Lesbian" is a gender-specific term that is only used for self-identified homosexual females. Bisexuality refers to individuals who are comfortable with both heterosexual and homosexual relationships.

Homosexuality has been widely maligned as deviant or sinful behavior in most cultures, attitudes stemming from religious and philosophical ideas about what behaviors are in accord with nature and natural law. On the other hand, many cultures throughout history have had specific socially sanctioned roles for erotic love and sexual expression between individuals of the same sex. Today attitudes towards homosexuality are changing from hostility to tolerance, as efforts are made to combat homophobic prejudice, to end discrimination, and to ensure the civil rights of all people irrespective of their sexual orientation.

Nevertheless, the topic has become one of great controversies of the twenty-first century. On the one hand, gay activists and many liberals regard homosexuality as an innate condition; they believe that homosexual behavior should be accepted as within the range of the diverse ways human beings express sexual love. They believe society should protect homosexuals as a civil rights issue. On the other side, many conservatives and religious people regard homosexuality as a deviant state and same-sex relations as outside the norm of what should be acceptable behavior. They regard homosexual behavior as a sin and believe society should treat it as a moral issue.

The causes of homosexuality are as yet unclear, and may be a complex of many factors. Same-sex attraction can be a powerful force that neither religious teachings nor will-power can defeat. Mainstream psychology has come around to the view that homosexuality is an innate condition, although a dissenting minority regard it as a disorder and have developed specialized therapies that can enable those who are willing to deal with their same-sex attraction and settle into a heterosexual lifestyle.[1]

These days, most homosexuals at first struggle against but eventually choose to accept their proclivity for the same sex as a part of their identity. In so doing, they may have to overcome social and familial disapproval, religiously based guilt, and personal shame. Some decide to openly identify themselves as "gay"; others choose to remain "in the closet," in keeping with the discretion that most heterosexuals practice in concealing their sex lives.

People whose value system is rooted in religion continue to see homosexual behavior, like all sexual behavior, as a moral issue. Morality is rooted in the responsible use of one's freedom to refrain from acting on illicit sexual urges—whether heterosexual or homosexual. Some churches condemn the homosexual lifestyle by its most unsavory aspects, like sprees with many partners. However, their judgment would be hypocritical unless they were equally opposed to the promiscuous behavior that has become so commonplace and accepted among heterosexuals. A consistent biblically based standard is that sexual activity is only appropriate to (heterosexual) marriage. Churches that condemn homosexuals may justifiably do so because they uphold the marriage standard for all their members, and see accommodating the wishes of homosexuals as corrosive to morality generally.[2] Other churches take the path of compassionate ministry: they include homosexuals as mandated by Jesus' call to minister to every lost sheep. They believe that God's grace is for all people whatever their sexual orientation, and see a homosexual not primarily as a homosexual but first as a human being made in the image of God.

Modern Prevalence of Homosexuality

Estimates of the modern prevalence of homosexuality vary considerably. They are complicated by differing or even ambiguous definitions of homosexuality, the stigma associated with homosexuality, frequent use of non-random samples, and by fluctuations over time and according to location.

The controversial Kinsey Reports of 1948 found that 37 percent of males in the United States had had some sexual experience with other men, and that four percent had always been exclusively homosexual. Among women, Kinsey found between two percent and six percent had "more or less exclusively" homosexual experience. His results, however, have been disputed, and follow up studies claimed that much of Kinsey's work was based on convenience samples rather than random samples, and thus would have been vulnerable to bias.[3] "His figures were undermined when it was revealed that he had disproportionately interviewed homosexuals and prisoners (many sex offenders)."[4][5]

More modern and precise research by Edward O. Laumann, reported in Sex in America: A definitive survey (1995), presented data on sexual practices and sexual relationships, number of partners, and the rate of homosexuality in the population. Homosexuality was reported to be 1.3 percent for women within the past year, and 4.1 percent since 18 years; for men, 2.7 percent within the past year, and 4.9 percent since 18 years.[6]

Contemporary Controversy over Homosexuality

Societal attitudes towards same-sex relationships, reflected in the attitude of the general population, the state and the church, have varied over the centuries, and from place to place. They have ranged from acceptance and even encouragement of pederastic relationships (as in Ancient Greece), to seeing the practice as a major sin deserving of repression through law enforcement and judicial mechanisms, even proscribing it under penalty of death.

Today many people argue for social acceptance and legal recognition of same-sex relationships, believing that homosexuality is an inborn trait. This is the position of the American Psychiatric Association, which since 1973 has rejected the view that homosexuality is a mental disorder and has called for society to respect homosexual rights. Many others still maintain the traditional view that homosexuality is a sin, the result of a choice to indulge in immoral behavior. For most religious-minded people, same-sex relationships are incompatible with their beliefs and world view.

Range of beliefs

Controversy over the issue of homosexuality became acute in the United States as the success of the Gay Rights Movement brought with it social and legal pressures to tolerate and accept behavior that a majority of the population had traditionally regarded as sinful and/or deviant. To draw the issue sharply: Many believe that the root cause of homosexuality is genetic, like left-handedness. Therefore a homosexual cannot be held morally responsible for his or her sexual orientation, and cannot be expected to change it. Having subjected them to discrimination in the past, society should now treat homosexuals as a discriminated minority in need of legal protection and civil rights, in the same manner as civil rights were guaranteed to African-Americans.

On the other side, those who reject this view regard homosexuality as a life-style in which same-sex attractions (which are common to numerous people) are acted upon instead of suppressed, and a homosexual as someone who has formed his or her identity from this attraction. The behavior is addictive and difficult to change. Even so, homosexual behavior is a moral issue, and those who identify themselves as homosexuals do not deserve any more protection than do alcoholics or smokers.

There are a number of shades of opinion between these two viewpoints. Generally, young people side with the liberal viewpoint, which is promoted by gays themselves. It has the endorsement of most mental health professionals. Older people, and members of conservative religious groups including Christians, Muslims and Jews, tend to hold the conservative view.

Question[7] The most conservative view The most liberal view
What homosexuality is A chosen lifestyle, and an identity formed around it. An innate orientation that one does not choose.
What causes it Multiple causes including: poor parenting, sexual molestation during childhood, demon possession. Addiction traps them in the lifestyle. Genetic causes plus unknown environmental factor in early childhood which "turns on" the gay gene(s).
At what age can it be detected During the teenage years, after puberty, when it is chosen. Same-sex orientation can be detected in pre-school children.
Is it a sin? Yes, a most serious sin, endangering the family and social stability. No, since there is no choice, there is no sin. Safe and consensual relationships are not inherently sinful.
Is it natural? It is unnatural and deviant, violating the principle of male-female relationships found throughout nature. It is normal and natural for a minority of humans, just as it is found in a minority of animals and birds of many species.
What should a homosexual do? Choose to remain celibate or attempt to change their orientation to hetersexual through therapy. Accept their sexual orientation and find a monogamous relationship with a same-sex partner. Attempting to change sexual orientation is impossible; therapies are futile and even dangerous.
God's attitude towards homosexuality He loves the sinner but hates the sin. He loves homosexuals but homosexual behavior is always sinful. He loves homosexuals as persons and approves of homosexual love if it is consensual and committed.
Can sexual preference be changed? Yes, through counseling, reparative therapy and prayer. Yet requires great effort because it is so addictive. No. Sexual orientation is fixed from birth. Therapy is ineffective and potentially dangerous, leading to depression and suicide.
Are anti-discrimination laws beneficial? No. Granting special privileges to a group defined by their moral choice is wrong. It can encourage more youth to embrace homosexuality. Yes. Homosexuals are a discriminated-against minority in need of protection.
What happens to children raised by gay or lesbian parents? A large percentage will become homosexuals. Those who don't will be deeply disturbed by their parents' homosexual lifestyle. The vast majority will be heterosexual, more tolerant and less judgmental than average.
Should same-sex couples be permitted to marry? No. By changing the time-honored basis of marriage, permitting same-sex marriages threatens regular families and thus the stability of society. Yes. Official recognition of their relationship and government benefits that come with it are a fundamental civil right.
Should churches recognize committed monogamous same-sex relationships? No. Gay relationships are an abomination, hated by God. Yes. All loving, committed adult relationships should be recognized and honored as God's gift of love.
Should gays be eligible for ordination as clergy? No. It would be a major lowering of standards and the condoning of sin. Yes. One's sexual orientation has no bearing on one's ability to be a priest or minister.

Gay Rights Movement

Main article: Gay rights movement

Although homosexual acts were decriminalized in some parts of the Western world, such as in Denmark in 1933, in Sweden in 1944, in the United Kingdom in 1967, and in Canada in 1969, it was not until the mid-1970s that homosexuals first began to achieve actual, though limited, civil rights in developed countries. A turning point was reached in 1973 when, in a vote decided by a plurality of the membership, the American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, thus negating its previous definition of homosexuality as a clinical mental disorder. In 1977, Quebec became the first state-level jurisdiction in the world to prohibit discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation.

Since the 1960s, in part due to their history of shared oppression, many gays and lesbians in the West, particularly those in major metropolitan areas, have developed a so-called "gay culture." To many, gay culture is exemplified by the gay pride movement, with annual parades and displays of rainbow flags. Yet not all gays choose to participate in such displays of "queer culture": some view it to be a frivolous display that perpetuates gay stereotypes and widens the gulf between gay and straight people.

The bewildering death toll wrought by AIDS epidemic in the early 1980s at first seemed to slow the progress of the gay rights movement, but in time it galvanized some parts of the gay community into community service and political action, and challenged the heterosexual community to respond compassionately. Many gay and lesbian groups and individuals organized campaigns to promote efforts in AIDS education, prevention, research, and patient support, and community outreach, as well as to demand government support for these programs. Gay Men's Health Crisis, Project Inform, and ACT UP are notable American examples of the gay community's response to the AIDS crisis. American motion pictures from this period dramatized the response of individuals and communities to the AIDS crisis, including An Early Frost (1985), Longtime Companion (1990), And the Band Played On (1993), Philadelphia (1993), and Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt (1989), the last referring to the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt last displayed in its entirety on the Mall in Washington, DC in 1996.

Today the Gay Rights Movement in the United States is highly organized and is working through the legal system and political process to secure complete civil rights for homosexuals in matters of employment, adoption, inheritance rights, up to and including gay marriage.

Gay marriage and civil unions

Legislation designed to create provisions for gay marriage in a number of countries has polarized international opinion and led to many well-publicized political debates and court battles. For moderate and conservative religious-minded people, the activism of the Gay Rights Movement in seeking civil rights for themselves up to the point of civil unions may be tolerable, but it becomes objectionable and even threatening when the legal changes they propose alter of the meaning and purpose of marriage, which affects everyone. They maintain that marriage is a specific institution designed as the union of a man and a woman, as a foundation for parenthood and the establishment of a family.

By 2006, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Canada, and South Africa had legalized same-sex marriage; in the United States, only Massachusetts had legalized gay marriage while the states of Vermont, Connecticut, and New Jersey allowed civil unions.[8] Maine, California, and Hawaii, as well as the District of Columbia, offered domestic partnerships.

By January 2021, same-sex marriage was legally performed and recognized in 29 countries, including the United States.[9]

Health and behavioral issues

Many homosexuals recognize the norm of a long-term relationship with one partner. Nevertheless, taken as a whole, the homosexual population includes a large percentage whose sexual behavior is aberrant by any standards. The health consequences of promiscuous homosexuality are tragic. In comparison to ordinary heterosexual lifestyles, homosexuals vary on a number of measures including the following:

  • The average homosexual male has 50 different partners in his lifetime, compared to six for the average heterosexual. These numbers are higher among those living in urban centers. The Kinsey Institute published a study of homosexual males living in San Francisco which reported that 43 percent had sex with 500 or more partners; 28 percent had sex with 1000 or more partners; and 79 percent said that over half of their sex partners were strangers.[10]
  • McWhirter and Mattison, both therapists who are homosexual, conducted a survey of 156 male couples. As reported in their book, The Male Couple, they found that 95 percent of the couples were unfaithful, and the five percent that were faithful had been together five or fewer years.[11] In contrast, surveys of heterosexual couples conducted in the 1990s show rates of infidelity ranging from four percent in a given year, 6.4 percent over a five-year period and 15-17 percent over the life of the marriage.[12] These results are opposite to the 95 percent of unfaithful homosexual couples. McWhirter and Mattison themselves stated, “The expectation for outside sexual activity was the rule for male couples and the exception for heterosexuals.”[11]
  • Some homosexual sexual practices are inherently risky, notably anal sex. The skin inside the anus is highly susceptible to tearing, which can create openings for viruses and bacteria to enter the body.
  • A report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Task Force on Youth Suicide in 1989 revealed that one-third of all teenage suicides are committed by those who suffer from homosexual problems. This is an extremely high percentage considering that only 1 to 3 percent of the population is homosexual. It was, however, noted that this increased risk of suicide might be attributable at least in part to a "hostile and condemning environment, verbal and physical abuse, rejection and isolation from family and peers".[13] Homosexual men are six times more likely to have attempted suicide than heterosexual men.[10]
  • The United States and several European countries require a deferral period of several months for men who have had sex with men from donating blood "because they are, as a group, at increased risk for HIV, hepatitis B and certain other infections that can be transmitted by transfusion."[14]

The medical problems associated with homosexuality are well-known in the gay community. The Gay and Lesbian Medical Association warns gay men about the following:[15]

  1. Come Out to your Healthcare Provider: In order to provide you with the best care possible, your clinician should know you are gay.
  2. HIV/AIDS, Safe Sex: That men who have sex with men are at an increased risk of HIV infection is well known, but the effectiveness of safe sex in reducing the rate of HIV infection is one of the gay community’s great success stories.
  3. 'Hepatitis Immunization and Screening": Men who have sex with men are at an increased risk of sexually transmitted hepatitis.
  4. Fitness (Diet and Exercise): Problems with body image are more common among gay men than their straight counterparts. This results in a higher prevalence in gay men of eating disorders such as bulimia or anorexia nervosa. Others overdo exercise and abuse of substances such as anabolic steroids. At the opposite end of the spectrum, overweight and obesity are problems that also affect a large subset of the gay community.
  5. Substance Abuse/Alcohol: Gay men abuse substances at a higher rate than the general population, and not just in larger cities.
  6. Depression/Anxiety: Depression and anxiety appear to affect gay men at a higher rate than in the general population.
  7. STDs: Sexually transmitted diseases (STD)s occur in sexually active gay men at a high rate.
  8. Prostate, Testicular, and Colon Cancer: The cultural sensitivities of gay men may lead them not to avail themselves of recommended screenings, thus putting them at higher risk of death by prostate, testicular, or colon cancer.
  9. Tobacco: It appears that gay men use tobacco at much higher rates than straight men, reaching nearly 50 percent in several studies. Tobacco-related health problems include lung disease and lung cancer, heart disease, high blood pressure, and a whole host of other serious problems.
  10. HPV (virus that causes warts and can lead to anal cancer): Of all the sexually transmitted infections gay men are at risk for, human papilloma virus (HPV)—which cause anal and genital warts—is often thought to be little more than an unsightly inconvenience. However, these infections may play a role in the increased rates of anal cancers in gay men.

Yet many homosexuals ignore the widespread publicity of these medical risks within the gay community.

Gays in the military

In the close quarters of male barracks and under the pressure of combat, many in the military see the presence of homosexuals as potentially creating problems of troop cohesiveness, discipline and morale. “Don't ask, don't tell” (DADT) was the official United States policy on military service by gay men, bisexuals, and lesbians, instituted by the Clinton Administration. The policy, which required homosexual soldiers to conceal their orientation and refrain from homosexual behavior, was issued under Department of Defense Directive 1304.26 on December 21, 1993, and was in effect from February 28, 1994, until September 20, 2011.[16] This imperfect compromise between open acceptance and prohibition was intended to enable homosexual men to serve their country honorably and without causing any disruption in the ranks. This policy was repealed in 2010, so that DADT was no longer policy as of September 20, 2011, allowing homosexuals to serve openly in the military.

Several other countries, including the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, also accept openly homosexual individuals into the armed forces. Islamic nations that adhere to the strict interpretation of Sharia remove individuals from their armed forces who are believed to be homosexual and may subject them to legal penalties.

Homosexuality in World Cultures

Sexual customs have varied greatly over time and from one region to another. Modern Western gay culture, largely a product of the loosening of sexual restraints generally in the twentieth century and given widespread social sanction as a result of the contemporary Gay Rights Movement, is a relatively recent manifestation of same-sex desire. It is generally not applicable as a standard when investigating same-gender sex in other cultures and historical periods.

Africa

Homosexual expression in sub-Saharan Africa was present that the time of European colonization and took a variety of forms, most often pederasty.[17] Anthropologists Murray and Roscoe reported that certain women in Lesotho engaged in socially sanctioned "long term, erotic relationships" named motsoalle.[18] These practices were more or less tolerated, until attitudes hardened after the coming of Christianity.

Americas

Dance to the Berdache
Sac and Fox Nation ceremonial dance to celebrate the two-spirit person. George Catlin (1796-1872); Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC

In North American Native society, the most common form of same-sex sexuality centers around the figure of the "two-spirit" individual or berdache. Such people seem to have been recognized by the majority of tribes, each of which had its particular term for the role. These individuals are often viewed as having two spirits occupying one body. Their dress is usually a mixture of traditionally male and traditionally female articles. They have distinct gender and social roles in their tribes. Typically the two-spirit individual was recognized early in life, given a choice by the parents to follow the path, and if the child accepted the role then raised in the appropriate manner, learning the customs of the chosen gender. Two-spirit individuals were commonly shamans and were revered as having powers beyond those of ordinary shamans.

Most of these individuals had relationships with the same, opposite, or either sexes. Female-bodied two-spirits usually had sexual relations or marriages with only females.[19] Male two-spirit people were often prized as wives because of their greater strength and ability to work. In the Lakota tribe, two-spirits commonly married widowers; in this function they parented their husband's children without any risk of bearing new children that she might give priority to.[20]

Balboa setting his war dogs upon Indian practitioners of male love in 1513; New York Public Library

The Spanish conquerors were horrified to discover sodomy openly practiced among native peoples, and attempted to crush it out by subjecting the berdaches under their rule to severe penalties, including public execution and burning. In a famous example of homophobic cruelty, in 1513 the conquistador Vasco Nunez de Balboa:

discovered that the village of Quarequa (in modern-day Panama) was stained by the foulest vice. The king’s brother and a number of other courtiers were dressed as women, and according to the accounts of the neighbors shared the same passion. Vasco ordered forty of them to be torn to pieces by dogs. The Spaniards commonly used their dogs in fighting against these naked people, and the dogs threw themselves upon them as though they were wild boars on timid deer.[21]

East Asia

A woman spying on a pair of male lovers, Qing Dynasty. Chinese Sexual Culture Museum in Shanghai.

In Asia same-sex love has been known since the dawn of history. Early Western travelers were taken aback by its widespread acceptance and open display.

Homosexuality in China, known as the "pleasures of the bitten peach," "the cut sleeve," or "the southern custom," has been recorded since approximately 600 B.C.E. These euphemistic terms were used to describe behaviors, but not identities. In more recent times, the Chinese society adopted the term "brokeback," 斷背 duanbei, due to the success of Chinese director Ang Lee's film Brokeback Mountain. In the past, such relationships were marked by differences in age and social position. However, the instances of same-sex affection and sexual interactions described in the Hong Lou Meng (Dream of the Red Chamber, or Story of the Stone) seem as familiar to observers in the present as do equivalent stories of romances between heterosexuals during the same period.

Homosexuality in Japan, variously known as shudo or nanshoku, terms influenced by Chinese literature, has been documented for over one thousand years. This same-sex love culture gave rise to strong traditions of painting and literature documenting and celebrating such relationships.

In Thailand, Kathoey, or "ladyboys," have been a feature of Thai society for many centuries, and Thai kings had male as well as female lovers. Kathoey are men who dress as women. They are generally accepted by society, and Thailand has never had legal prohibitions against homosexuality or homosexual behavior. Thai Buddhism recognized the existence of this third gender.

Europe

Erastes (lover) and eromenos (beloved) kissing. Detail from the tondo of a red-figure Attic cup, ca. 480 B.C.E. Paris, Musée du Louvre.

Ancient Greek art, mythology, and philosophic works depict a society in which relationships between adult men and adolescent youths were often valued for their pedagogic benefits and as a means of population control, although they were occasionally blamed for causing disorder. Generally these relationships were seen as part of a young man's education before he became an adult, took a wife and formed a heterosexual family. Plato praised the benefits of pederasty in his early writings, but later rejected its erotic character in favor of chaste relationships, what became known as Platonic love.

Socially sanctioned man-boy love continued in the Roman Empire until the coming of Christianity. Emperor Theodosius I decreed a law in 390 C.E. condemning passive homosexuals to be burned at the stake. However, taxes on brothels of boys available for homosexual sex continued to be collected until the end of the reign of Anastasius I in 518. Justinian, towards the end of his reign, expanded the proscription to the active partner as well (in 558) warning that such conduct can lead to the destruction of cities through the "wrath of God."

Accusations of homosexuality have at times been used as a political weapon. For example, during the early fourteenth century, accusations of homosexual behavior were instrumental in disbanding the Knights Templar under Philip IV of France, who profited greatly from confiscating the Templars' wealth.

During the Renaissance, rich cities in northern Italy, Florence and Venice in particular, were renowned for their widespread practice of same-sex love, engaged in by a considerable part of the male (elite) population and constructed along the classical pattern of Ancient Greece and Rome.[22] [23] The eclipse of this period of relative artistic and erotic freedom was precipitated by the rise to power of the moralizing monk Girolamo Savonarola. In northern Europe the artistic discourse on sodomy was turned against its proponents by artists such as Rembrandt, who in his Rape of Ganymede no longer depicted Ganymede as a willing youth, but as a squalling baby attacked by a rapacious bird of prey.

In the twentieth century, tens of thousands of homosexuals were murdered in the Holocaust, based upon the Nazi proposition that they were a risk of contamination to the "Aryan race."

Middle East and Central Asia

Dance of a bacchá (dancing boy)
Samarkand, (ca. 1905 - 1915), photo Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii. Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

Among many Middle-Eastern Muslim cultures, homosexual practices were widespread and public. Persian poets, such as Attar (d. 1220), Rumi (d. 1273), Sa’di (d. 1291), Hafez (d. 1389), and Jami (d. 1492), wrote poems replete with homo-erotic allusions. The two most commonly documented forms were commercial sex with transgender males or males enacting transgender roles exemplified by the köçek and the bacchá, and certain Sufi spiritual practices.

In Persia, homosexuality and homo-erotic expressions were tolerated in numerous public places, from monasteries and seminaries to taverns, military camps, bathhouses, and coffee houses. In the early Safavid era (1501-1723), male houses of prostitution (amrad khane) were legally recognized and paid taxes.

A rich tradition of art and literature sprang up, constructing Middle Eastern homosexuality in ways analogous to the ancient tradition of male love in which Ganymede, cup-bearer to the gods, symbolized the ideal boyfriend. Muslim—often Sufi—poets in medieval Arab lands and in Persia wrote odes to the beautiful Christian wine boys who, they claimed, served them in the taverns and shared their beds at night. In many areas the practice survived into modern times (as documented by Richard Francis Burton, André Gide, and others).

In Central Asia, on the Silk Route, the two traditions of the East and the West met, and gave rise to a strong local culture of same-sex love. In the Turkic-speaking areas, one manifestation of this involved the bacchá, adolescent or adolescent-seeming male entertainers and sex workers.

South Pacific

Same-sex relationships were an integral part of the culture of many Melanesian societies before the introduction of Christianity. Traditional Melanesian insemination rituals existed where a boy, upon reaching a certain age would be paired with an older adolescent who would become his mentor and whom he would ritually fellate over a number of years in order to develop his own masculinity. In certain tribes of Papua New Guinea, it is considered a normal ritual responsibility for a boy to have a relationship in order to accomplish his ascent into manhood. Most of these practices have since died out.

Cultural anthropology

Researchers studying the social construction of same-sex relationships in the various cultures around the world have suggested that the concept of homosexuality would best be rendered as "homosexualities." They document that same-sex relations have been, and continue to be, organized in distinct categories by different societies in different eras. These variations are grouped by cultural anthropologist Stephen O. Murray[24] and others[25] into (usually) three separate modes of association:

Association Description
Egalitarian features two partners with no relevance to age. Additionally, both play the same socially-accepted sex role as heterosexuals of their own sex. This is exemplified by relationships currently prevalent in western society between partners of similar age and gender.
Gender structured features each partner playing a different gender role. This is exemplified by traditional relations between men in the Mediterranean Basin, the Middle East and Central and South Asia, as well as Two-Spirit or shamanic gender-changing practices seen in native societies. In North America, this is best represented by the butch/femme practice.
Age structured features partners of different ages, usually one adolescent and the other adult. This is exemplified by pederasty among the Classical Greeks; southern Chinese boy-marriage rites; and Central Asian and Middle Eastern practices.

Gender-structured and age-structured homosexuality typically involve one partner adopting a "passive" and the other an "active" role to a much greater degree than in egalitarian relationships. Among men, being the passive partner often means receiving semen, by performing fellatio or being the receptive partner during anal sex. This is sometimes interpreted as an emphasis on the sexual pleasure of the active partner, although this is disputed. For example, in gender-structured female homosexuality in Thailand, active partners (toms) emphasize the sexual pleasure of the passive partner (dee), and often refuse to allow their dee to pleasure them, while in ancient Greece the pederastic tradition was seen as engendering strong friendships between the partners, and was blamed for predisposing males to continue seeking the "passive" pleasures they experienced as adolescents even after they matured.

Usually in any society one form of homosexuality predominates, though others are likely to co-exist. As historian Rictor Norton says in Ancient Greece egalitarian relationships co-existed (albeit less privileged) with the institution of pederasty, and sexual fascination with adolescents can also be found among modern homosexuals. Egalitarian homosexuality has emerged as the principal form practiced in the Western world, while age- and gender-structured homosexuality have become less common. As a byproduct of growing Western cultural dominance, this egalitarian homosexuality is spreading from western culture to non-Western societies, although there are still defined differences between the various cultures.

Causes of Homosexuality: Nature versus Nurture

A hotly debated topic among biologists, psychologists and anthropologists concerns the causes of homosexuality. The current debate is whether homosexuality is the result of nature—a person's biology and genetics, or of nurture—a person's environment and surroundings. Much about human sexuality remains unknown, and the debate continues to this day without any conclusive resolution. Most likely there are both innate and environmental factors at work.[26]

This debate is inevitably tied to the moral issue. Many believe that prejudice against gays and lesbians will melt away if the public were to accept the belief that a person's sexual orientation is mainly determined by genes. If genetic, then same-sex orientation is not a choice but something beyond one's control. Moreover, belief that homosexuality is determined by nature predisposes homosexuals to accept their sexual orientation as natural and to live a homosexual lifestyle; furthermore it fosters the belief that they cannot change and live as a heterosexual even if they want to. On the other hand, some homosexuals fear the development of a genetic "cure."

If homosexuality is primarily fostered by the environment, e.g., family upbringing, molestation as a child, or affiliation with a youth sub-culture, then homosexual individuals can change their orientation, either through therapy or by suppressing same-sex attraction and taking on a heterosexual lifestyle. Indeed, they have a moral obligation to do so, in order to reject behavior that is sinful and unhealthy, and find fulfillment in the normative structure of the monogamous heterosexual family. The power of belief to shape an individual's identity would argue that accepting the view that one's homosexuality is genetically determined means to participate in a particular social construction in which that identity becomes permanent.

Nature

Much research on the biology of homosexuality has sought to demonstrate an innate biological and even a genetic basis for this sexual orientation. To date the results have been equivocal.

Physiological differences

Several studies, including pioneering work by neuroscientist Simon LeVay, have demonstrated that there are notable differences between the physiology of a heterosexual male and a homosexual male. These differences are primarily found in the brain, inner ear, and olfactory sense. LeVay discovered in his double-blind experiment that the average size of the INAH-3 in the brains of homosexual men was significantly smaller than the average size in heterosexual male brains.[27]

This study has come under criticism for not taking into account the fact that all of the brains of homosexual men he studied were from men who had died of AIDS, which was not equally true of the heterosexuals whose brains he studied. Therefore, rather than looking at the cause of homosexuality, he may have been observing the effects of HIV/AIDS. Still, similar size differences were found when comparisons were made of the INAH-3 measurements in only the brains of those in each group who died from complications due to AIDS, although that sample group was too small to be definitive. Moreover, currently no evidence has been found to suggest that HIV or the effects of AIDS would result in changes in INAH-3 size.

Some people have interpreted LeVay's work as showing that some people are born homosexual; however, in LeVay's own words:

It's important to stress what I didn't find. I did not prove that homosexuality was genetic, or find a genetic cause for being gay. I didn't show that gay men are born that way, the most common mistake people make in interpreting my work. Nor did I locate a gay center in the brain. INAH-3 is less likely to be the sole gay nucleus of the brain than a part of a chain of nuclei engaged in men and women's sexual behavior…. Since I looked at adult brains we don't know if the differences I found were there at birth, or if they appeared later.[28]

Homosexual behavior in animals

Homosexual behavior has been observed in the animal kingdom, especially in social species, particularly marine birds and mammals.[29]

  • Male penguin couples have been documented to mate for life, build nests together, and to use a stone as a surrogate egg in nesting and brooding. In 2004, the Central Park Zoo in New York City replaced one male couple's stone with a fertile egg, which the couple then raised as their own offspring.[30] German and Japanese zoos have also reported homosexual behavior among their penguins. This phenomenon has also been reported at Kelly Tarlton's Aquarium in Auckland, New Zealand.
  • Homosexual behavior in male sheep (found in 6-10 percent of rams) is associated with variations in cerebral mass distribution and chemical activity. A study reported in Endocrinology concluded that biological and physiological factors are in effect.[31]

While animal behavior cannot easily be extrapolated to humans, homosexual advocates seize upon this data to suggest that homosexual behavior is part of the order of nature and not contrary to nature. Critics point out that much of the homosexual behavior observed in animals is situational, occurring only when there is no opportunity for heterosexual activity, for example in the crowded conditions of zoos where the animals are penned in, or as a means of social cooperation in raising young. It thus may be analogous to the situational homosexuality found in prison and the military where otherwise heterosexual humans may resort to homosexual activity.

Genetic studies

The strongest evidence for genetic inheritance of a particular trait or condition would be to find higher incidence in identical twins. Bailey and Pillard studied the sexual orientation of male siblings in the same family. They found that if one sibling was homosexual, the chance of the other sibling also being homosexual was 52 percent for an identical twin, 22 percent for a fraternal (non-identical) twin, and 10 percent for adopted or non-twin brothers.[32] The study is suggestive, but it is not definitive and has been critiqued for possible sampling errors. In fact, some have suggested that their findings provide strong evidence for the influence of the environment.[33]

Dean Hamer of the National Cancer Institute used chromosome mapping to attempt to identify some genetic markers responsible for same-sex attraction, the so-called "gay gene."[34] However, Hamer failed to use a control group, as the subjects' heterosexual brothers might have had the same genetic markers. A Canadian research team using a similar experimental design was unable to duplicate the findings of Hamer’s study.[35]

At this point, research attempting to demonstrate biological causes of homosexuality are regarded skeptically by many mainstream biologists. The research has been suggestive, but it is plagued by methodological problems including poor sampling, lack of rigorous control groups, and lack of replicability by other researchers. Comments like this are typical:

Recent studies postulate biologic factors as the primary basis for sexual orientation. However, there is no evidence at present to substantiate a biologic theory, just as there is no compelling evidence to support any singular psychological explanation. While all behavior must have an ultimate biologic substrate, the appeal of current biologic explanations for sexual orientation may derive more from dissatisfaction with the present status of psychosocial explanations than from a substantiating body of experimental data. Critical review shows the evidence favoring a biologic theory to be lacking. In an alternative model, temperamental and personality traits interact with the familial and social milieu as the individual’s sexuality emerges.[36]
Reports of morphological differences between the brains of humans with different sexual orientation or gender identity have furthered speculation that such behaviors may result from hormonal or genetic influences on the developing brain. However, the causal chain may be reversed; sexual behavior in adulthood may have caused the morphological differences…. It is possible that differences in sexual behavior cause, rather than are caused by, differences in brain structure.[37]

Supposing these genetic studies are borne out by further research; how does one interpret them? Quite a number of diseases, mental disorders and disabilities have a genetic component, including Huntington's disease, Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, schizophrenia, alcoholism and autism. On the other hand, normal traits such has left-handedness and skin color are also genetic. Hence, finding a genetic factor in homosexuality does not in itself prove that homosexuality is within the range of normal behavior. Furthermore, as genetic research proceeds with the goal of finding methods of gene manipulation to effect cures for illnesses like diabetes and autism, the same could potentially be done for homosexuality.

Neither do such studies prove that genes are the cause of homosexuality. If homosexuality were strictly caused by genes—as is, for example, skin color—then 100 percent of identical twins of homosexuals would become homosexual; but Bailey and Pillard find that the percentage is around 50 percent. This means that some other cause must contribute the other 50 percent—Bailey himself stated, "There must be something in the environment to yield the discordant twins."[38] The alleged genetic basis would create a propensity to be homosexual, but it does not determine homosexuality. The other factor is likely to be environmental. Schizophrenia presents similarly: genes account for about 50 percent and the other 50 percent is environmental. There is some yet unknown synergy between genes and environment that together produces homosexuality. Some researchers speculate that some environmental effect may trigger the "gay gene" to full expression—perhaps an event in early childhood. More likely, the gene or genes may confer a certain heightened susceptibility to same-sex attraction that will become fixated based on life-choices made after puberty. In short, both nature and nurture may be involved.

Prenatal hormonal theory

Psychologist Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia Sexualis (1866) was the first scientific discussion of homosexuality. After interviewing many homosexuals, both as his private patients and as a forensic expert, Krafft-Ebing arrived at the conclusion that homosexuality is an anomalous process of embryonic development that leads to a "sexual inversion" of the brain.

Today the neurobiology of the masculinization of the fetal brain is fairly well understood. Estradiol, and testosterone, which is catalyzed by the enzyme 5α-reductase into dihydrotestosterone, act upon androgen receptors in the brain to masculinize it. If there are few androgen receptors (people with Androgen insensitivity syndrome) or too much androgen (females with Congenital adrenal hyperplasia) there can be physical and psychological effects.[39] It has been suggested that both male and female homosexuality are results of variation in this process.[40] However, studies seeking to demonstrate a link between this developmental process and homosexuality have been inconclusive. While lesbianism is linked with a higher amount of masculinization than is found in heterosexual females; however, the data as regards male homosexuality shows no significant correlation.

Failure to confirm the prenatal hormone theory does not mean that some other developmental mechanism may be at work, perhaps in early childhood. Even if such a mechanism were found, we would be far from knowing whether this mechanism was the result of the genetic factor mentioned above or an independent factor, perhaps environmental.

Nurture

The variety of the specific social constructions of homosexuality across cultures (above) supports the view that a large component of homosexuality is socially conditioned and learned behavior. In societies with age-structured homosexuality such as Ancient Greece, homosexual youths upon maturity would take on heterosexual patterns of life. The social argument for homosexuality dates back to the ancient Greeks. Aristophanes in the Symposium viewed homosexuality as a desire by men to share a long-term fulfillment of the soul. He believed that two souls are longing to be together, however sexual desire alone is not strong enough to create that bond; rather it is the cultural environment that allows or forbids the relationship to occur.[41]

The view that much homosexuality is socially constructed is supported by clear instances of situational homosexuality. Situational homosexuality occurs when there is no opportunity for heterosexual activity, as in prison, the military, and monastic orders. In prisons for example, homosexual behavior is commonplace and provides a way of asserting dominance and requiring submission. In some tribes of Papua New Guinea insemination of adolescent boys by the warriors of the tribe was mandatory. Most "situational homosexuals" are heterosexual in other social contexts.

Yet there is no bright line between situational homosexuality and other homosexualities. For example, the well-known pederasty of ancient Greece mentioned above, was expected of well-bred youths as society regarded it beneficial to their education.

Psychologists, particularly in psychoanalytic or developmental traditions, speculated that formative childhood experiences underlie sexual orientation. Classically, Sigmund Freud believed that all children go through a stage in their psychosexual development when they are bisexual and have the potential for either heterosexual or homosexual expression, from which they normally make the transition to heterosexuality in adulthood. Those who turn to homosexuality as adults he believed had experienced some traumatic event that arrested their sexual development. Contemporary psychologists look at problems in parental and family dynamics in childhood that create issues of gender identification later in life.

Psychology of homosexuality

Among psychologists who regard homosexuality as a treatable condition, the prevailing theory is that homosexual feelings, thoughts, and desires are symptoms of deeper psychological issues. They represent a defensive response to conflicts in the present, a way to compensate for the pain and discomfort of an unresolved childhood trauma, archaic emotions, frozen feelings, and wounds that never healed. They also represent a reparative drive to fulfill unmet homo-emotional love needs of the past—an unconscious drive for bonding with the same-sex parent. Elizabeth Moberly and Joseph Nicolosi developed the term "homo-emotional love need."[42][43]

A homo-emotional love need is an unconscious drive for bonding between a son and his father, or between a daughter and her mother. If questioned, the active homosexual would not say he is looking for his father’s love in the arms of another man. It is rather a hidden, unconscious drive buried deep in the psyche. This is a variation of the general principle that applies to people's choice of partners in heterosexual relationships, which are conditioned by unconscious childhood needs. According to Harville Hendrix:

Each of us enters adulthood harboring unresolved childhood issues with our parents, whether or not we know it or will admit it. Those needs have to be met, because their satisfaction is equated, in our unconscious minds, with survival. Therefore, their satisfaction becomes the agenda in adult love relationships.[44]

Therapist Richard Cohen, executive director of PATH (Positive Approaches to Healthy Sexuality), describes three underlying drives that contribute to unwanted same-sex attractions:[45]

  • Need for the same-sex parent’s love: Homosexual thoughts and feelings originate in preadolescent experiences. Therefore, it is basically a nonsexual condition. “The homosexual love need is essentially a search for parenting…. What the homosexual seeks is the fulfillment of these normal attachment needs, which have abnormally been left unmet in the process of growth.”[46] That is, a man is looking for his father’s love through another man, and a woman is looking for her mother’s love through another woman. Therefore, the drive is one of reparation, seeking to fulfill unmet love needs of the past. However, these deeper emotional love needs can never be fulfilled through sexual relationships. Sex never heals nor fulfills them, because they are the unmet needs of a child. Reparative therapy strives to heel these needs through nonsexual bonding.
  • Need for gender identification: The homosexual person feels a lack of masculinity or femininity within himself or herself and seeks to fulfill this need through another man or woman.[47] This resulted from a distant or disrupted relationship between father and son or mother and daughter in early childhood or adolescence. Homosexual people experience this as a feeling of inadequacy and incompleteness and search for the missing part of themselves through a sexual contact or union with another person of the same sex, which provides, at least momentarily, that longed-for sense of wholeness.
  • Fear of intimacy with someone of the opposite sex: Some homosexual males had an abnormally close mother-son attachment as a child. He may overidentify with his mother and femininity and disidentify with his father and masculinity. Later in puberty, the son may experience sexual attraction toward his mother that leads to extreme guilt and the repression of a normal sexual drive toward women. He might then turn to men for intimacy and sex, not wanting to “betray” his mother or re-experience his guilt. This process may be completely unconscious.[48] [49] [50] Lesbians often suffered childhood abuse at the hands of the father or another significant man. The abuse could have been sexual, emotional, mental, or physical. This leaves her deeply traumatized by men. Not wanting to re-experience the memory of abuse, she then turns to women for comfort, love, and understanding.[51]

Cohen lists ten psycho-social wounds that can destabilize the formation of healthy attachments and contribute to the formation of homosexual attachments:[52]

  1. Heredity: Inherited wounds; Unresolved family issues; Misperceptions; Mental filters; Predilection for rejection.
  2. Temperament: Hypersensitive; High maintenance; Artistic nature; Gender nonconforming behaviors: Male more feminine; Female more masculine.
  3. Hetero-Emotional Wounds: Enmeshment; Neglect; Abuse; Abandonment; Addictions; Imitation of behaviors; Wrong sex.
  4. Homo-Emotional Wounds: Neglect; Abuse; Enmeshment; Abandonment; Addictions; Imitation of behaviors; Wrong sex.
  5. Sibling Wounds/Family Dynamics: Put-downs; Abuse; Name-calling.
  6. Body Image Wounds: Late Bloomer; Physical disabilities; Shorter; Skinnier; Larger; Lack of coordination.
  7. Sexual Abuse: Homosexual imprinting; Learned and reinforced behaviors; Substitute for affection.
  8. Social or Peer Wounds: Name-calling; Put-downs; Goody-goody; Teacher’s pet; Nonathletic; No rough and tumble (boy); Too rough and tumble (girl).
  9. Cultural Wounds: Media; Educational system; Entertainment industry; Internet; Pornography.
  10. Other Factors: Divorce; Death; Intrauterine experiences and influences; Adoption; Religion.

Treatment

That homosexuality is no longer generally viewed as a treatable disease by mental health professionals is mainly due to the APA's position that homosexuality should be regarded not as a disorder but rather within the range of socially acceptable sexual expression. Therefore, there are ethical and political issues surrounding treating homosexuality as a disorder. The prevailing attitude of the mental health profession and recovery movement is “gay affirmative therapy,” helping the client come to accept their homosexuality. Yet helping clients in this way may leave an unresolved ache in the soul, if that person is inwardly crying out for recovering his or her original heterosexual being.

Those who do believe homosexuality in the form of unwanted same-sex attraction to be a condition, have developed programs similar to alcohol and drug treatment programs in which clinicians help homosexuals overcome their preference for homosexual behavior and attraction to people of the same sex, as well as developing satisfying heterosexual relationships. These treatment programs are run by religious groups and psychotherapists.

Therapists recognize the futility of simply "toughing it out" in a heterosexual marriage or striving to "pray away" unwanted homosexual feelings:

Marriage is not the solution for anyone who has homosexual feelings, because a woman can never meet the homo-emotional needs of a man, and a man can never meet the homo-emotional needs of a woman. In the process of recovery, first a man must heal with other men, and a woman must heal with other women.
Some of my well-intentioned friends told me, “Richard, just find the right woman and she’ll straighten you out,” or “Just pray hard enough, and God will take it all away. If not, then you’re doing something wrong.” Well, I wish it would have been that simple, but it was not. I prayed and prayed for God to take the desires away, but He did not. I married, hoping it would straighten me out, but the same-sex desires only intensified. I came to understand that I had been praying the wrong prayer for nearly twenty years. What I needed to pray was: “God, please show me the meaning of my same-sex desires.” Later, I understood that God would never take them away, because they had a deeper meaning that I needed to discover, heal, and ultimately fulfill in healthy, non-sexual relationships.[1]

Reparative therapists have developed a four-stage plan of therapy that begins with behavior change and continues over several years of to build up a healthy sense of self and deal with childhood wounds through non-sexual bonding in a supportive context supervised by the therapist.

Religion and Homosexuality

Generally, traditional religious teachings condemn homosexuality as unnatural, abhorrent to God, and not leading to human fulfillment. Homosexuality, however, is rarely singled out but is classified among the several illicit sexual practices that are inimical to marriage and family, or among the failings on the path of self-control required of those pursuing a religious vocation.

In response to the modern view that homosexuality is within the range of natural sexual attractions, some liberal religious groups have adopted an open stance towards homosexuals.

Judaism

According to the Torah, "[A man] shall not lie with another man as with a woman, it is a toeva (abomination)" (Leviticus 18:22). Like many similar commandments, the stated punishment for willful violation is the death penalty, although in practice rabbinic Judaism rid itself of the death penalty for all practical purposes 2,000 years ago. Rabbinic Jewish tradition understands this verse to prohibit all forms of homosexual contact between men. Rabbinic works ban lesbian acts of sex as well.

Many liberal Jewish congregations are accepting of homosexuals. Reform Judaism does not argue that normative Jewish law can change to validate homosexual sex; the argument is that this law, like many of the laws in the Torah, is archaic and no longer binding in today's modern culture. Reform and Reconstructionist congregations now welcome members regardless of sexual orientation, and some rabbis have been known to perform same-sex marriages.

Christianity

Traditional Christianity is firm in rejecting all forms of homosexuality. The condemnation in Leviticus mentioned above is confirmed by passages in New Testament, such as Acts 15:29 which explicitly advised that Gentile converts were to keep from sexual immorality. The first chapter of the Epistle to the Romans contains the only explicit mention of lesbianism in the Bible, calling it "against nature:"

God gave them up unto vile passions: for their women changed the natural use into that which is against nature: and likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another…. (Romans 1:26-27)

The destruction of Sodom as illustrated by Sebastian Münster (1564)

God's judgment on homosexuality is illustrated by the fate of Sodom (from whence comes the term 'sodomy') and Gomorrah, after a mob surrounded Lot's house and demanded that he bring out the men who had come to lodge with them.

The men of Sodom surrounded the house, both young and old, all the people from every quarter; and they called to Lot and said to him, "Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us that we may have relations with them." But Lot went out to them at the doorway, and shut the door behind him, and said, "Please, my brothers, do not act wickedly. Now behold, I have two daughters who have not had relations with man; please let me bring them out to you, and do to them whatever you like; only do nothing to these men, inasmuch as they have come under the shelter of my roof." (Genesis 19:4-8)

By offering his daughters, Lot was protecting the guests who had taken refuge in his home—an act of great hospitality—from the mob who were intent on homosexual rape. The cities were subsequently burned with fire and brimstone, a deserved punishment. The unnaturalness of the intended crime was made worse by the fact that the guests were in fact angels. In the New Testament, the Epistle of Jude refers to this incident when describing an earlier unnatural union, between angels and human women in Genesis 6:1-2, which is said to have brought disaster upon the earth, when the sons of God took wives from among the daughters of men. It can also be interpreted as a reference to the relations between Lucifer and Eve at the Fall of Man:

And the angels that did not keep their own position but left their proper dwelling have been kept by him in eternal chains in the nether gloom until the judgment of the great day; just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the surrounding cities, which likewise acted immorally and indulged in unnatural lust, serve as an example by undergoing a punishment of eternal fire. (Jude 6-7 RSV)

Some Christians therefore make the connection between homosexuality and demon possession, the activity of fallen angels. Since angels are without gender, the behavior of fallen angels with one another and with humans could be a spiritual prototype of homosexuality.

From early Christianity until recent times, the leading lights of the church have universally condemned homosexuality as among the worst of all sexual sins. Denunciations of sodomy are found in the church fathers, including Justin Martyr, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, Saint Cyprian, Eusebius, Saint Basil the Great, Saint John Chrysostom, and Saint Augustine of Hippo. In the Medieval church, Thomas Aquinas denounced sodomy as second only to bestiality as the worst of all sexual sins, and Hildegard of Bingen in Scivias condemned sexual relations between women as "perverted forms." The Roman Catholic Church requires homosexuals to practice chastity in the understanding that homosexual acts are "intrinsically disordered," and "contrary to the natural law." It insists that all are expected to only have heterosexual relations and only in the context of a marriage, describing homosexual tendencies as "a trial," and stressing that people with such tendencies "must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity."[53] For those seeking to become priests, the Vatican requires that any homosexual tendencies "must be clearly overcome at least three years before ordination."[54]

In recent years, many liberal Christians have come around to accept the view that homosexuality is an innate condition rather than a moral fault. Some major denominations, such as the United Church of Christ, the Unitarian Church and some Presbyterian and Anglican churches welcome members regardless of sexual orientation, and some ministers in these churches even perform same-sex marriages. There is even a new denomination, the Metropolitan Community Church, that ministers specifically to the gay community.

Christians in these churches have developed doctrinal stances that support open ministries to homosexuals. Taking an historicist interpretation of scripture, they conclude that past scriptural prohibitions must give way to the modern understanding of homosexuality as the outworking of an orientation. Some consider that scripture has a thoroughgoing patriarchal bias, which expresses itself in a disapproval of all gender-transgressive sexual practices; present-day readings must account for this. The inclusion of the "unclean" Gentiles in the early Church is sometimes said to be a model for the inclusion of other peoples called "unclean" today. Above all, these churches regard homosexuals as first and foremost human beings created in the image of God, and take Jesus' imperative to seek and find the "lost sheep" as requiring ministry to this group that the church has disregarded for so long.

Ordination of gay clergy, however, has led to heated controversy, as many are not willing to accept homosexuals in a position of spiritual authority. The Anglican Communion encountered discord that caused a rift between African (except Southern Africa) and Asian Anglican churches on the one hand and North American churches on the other when some American and Canadian churches openly ordained gay clergy and began blessing same-sex unions.

Islam

What! Of all creatures do ye come unto the males, and leave the wives your Lord created for you? Nay, but ye are froward (disobedient) folk. (Qur'an 26:165-166)

All major Islamic sects disapprove of homosexuality, and same-sex intercourse is an offense punishable by execution in six Muslim nations: Saudi Arabia, Iran, Mauritania, Sudan, Somalia, and Yemen.[55] In Muslim nations such as Bahrain, Qatar, Algeria, Pakistan the Maldives, and Malaysia, homosexuality is punished with prison, fines or corporal punishment.

Islam tolerates same-sex desires by viewing them as a temptation; sexual relations, however, are seen as a transgression of the natural role and aim of sexual activity.[56] Islamic teachings (in the hadith tradition) presume same-sex attraction, extol abstention, and (in the Qur'an) condemn consummation. Islamic law governs the physical actions, not a person's inner thoughts and feelings. Thus, same-sex intercourse is punishable under the Sharia, but homosexuality as an attraction is not against the Sharia. Indeed, the Qur'an's realism about pederastic impulses is seen in its description of the rewards in Paradise for those who abstain from such impulses; there believers are attended by perpetually young virgin lovers, women and men, houri and ghilman (56.37).

Hinduism

Among the religions that originated in India, including Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, teachings regarding homosexuality are less clear than among the Abrahamic traditions. However, most contemporary religious authorities view homosexuality negatively, and when it is discussed, it is discouraged or actively forbidden.

Sexuality is rarely discussed openly in Hindu society, and homosexuality is largely a taboo subject—especially among the strongly religious. The ancient Hindu law codes such as the Manu Smriti refer to both female and male homosexuality as a punishable crime.[57]

Several Hindu texts, such as Manu Smriti[58] and Sushruta Samhita, assert that some people are born with either mixed male and female natures, or sexually neuter, as a matter of natural biology. Such people worked as hairdressers, flower-sellers, servants, masseurs, and prostitutes. Today, many people of this "third gender" (hijras) live throughout India, mostly on the margins of society, and many still work in prostitution, or live as beggars.

Buddhism

Buddhism discourages sexual behavior that would disturb the equanimity of the practitioner or of others, and Buddhism is often characterized as distrustful of sensual enjoyment in general.[59] Accordingly, homosexual conduct and gender variance are seen as obstacles to spiritual progress in most schools of Buddhism.

References to pandaka, a deviant sex/gender category that is usually interpreted to include homosexual males, can be found throughout the Pali canon.[60] In Buddhaghosa's Samantapasadika, they are described as being filled with defiled passions and insatiable lusts, and are dominated by their libido. The Abhidhamma states that a pandaka cannot achieve enlightenment in his or her own lifetime, but must wait for rebirth as a normal man or woman.

Historically, in Japanese Shingon Buddhism, relationships between male priests and young male acolytes were the norm, especially during the Edo period.

The third of the Five Precepts of Buddhism states that one is to refrain from sexual misconduct; this precept is usually understood to include homosexuality. The Dalai Lama interprets sexual misconduct to include lesbian and gay sex, and indeed any sex other than penis-vagina intercourse, including oral sex, anal sex, and masturbation, or other sexual activity with the hand. Nevertheless, he spoke out strongly against discrimination and violence against lesbians and gays, urging "respect, compassion, and full human rights for all."[61] On the other hand, some contemporary Western Buddhists and hold very accepting views of lesbians and gays, and may even consecrate same-sex marriages.

Sikhism

Sikh (Punjabi) society is conservative and intoleration of homosexual behavior. In 2005, the world's highest Sikh religious authority described homosexuality as "against the Sikh religion and the Sikh code of conduct and totally against the laws of nature," and called on Sikhs to support laws against homosexuality.[62]

Jainism

Chastity is one of the five virtues in the fundamental ethical code of Jainism. For laypersons, the only appropriate avenue for sexuality is within marriage, and homosexuality is believed to lead to negative karma.[63] A modern Jain authority wrote in 2004 that homosexuality and transvestism "stain one's thoughts and feelings" because they involve sexual passion.[64]

Confucianism

The Confucian moral code emphasizes a person's responsibility to family and society. Confucians are expected to get married and have children; this is their responsibility to their parents and their ancestors. A male's duty is to have male children to pass on his family name; a female's duty is to bear her husband male children to carry on his family name. Homosexuality cannot result in reproduction; this is the main reason why Confucians disapprove of it. However, there are records of married men who took male lovers, which was seen as a private matter.

Confucianism stresses an individual's obligations of filial piety to his parents and loyalty to his country. If a one's parents forbade one from engaging in homosexuality, or if the state outlawed homosexuality (as was the case in China between 1740 and 1997), one would be expected to comply with these orders.

Daoism

Daoism stresses the relationship between yin and yang: two opposing forces which maintain harmony through balance. The Daoist tradition holds that males need the energies of females, and vice versa, in order to bring about balance, completion, and transformation. Heterosexual relations is seen as the physical and emotional embodiment of the harmonious balance between yin and yang. Homosexuality is seen as the union of two yins or two yangs, and therefore unbalanced; hence it does not lead to human fulfillment.[65]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Richard Cohen, Coming Out Straight: Understanding and Healing Homosexuality (Winchester, VA: Oakhill Press, 2006, ISBN 1886939772).
  2. Hence their opposition to the campaign to legalize gay marriage.
  3. W.G. Cochran, F. Mosteller, and J.W. Tukey, Statistical Problems of the Kinsey Report on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male (Washington, DC: American Statistical Association, 1954).
  4. Tom Bethell, "Kinsey as Pervert" American Spectator 38 (April 2005): 42-44.
  5. Julia A. Ericksen, "With enough cases, why do you need statistics? Revisiting Kinsey's methodology" The Journal of Sex Research 35(2) (May 1998): 132-140.
  6. Robert T. Michael, John H. Gagnon, Edward O. Laumann, and Gina Kolata, Sex in America: A definitive survey (Boston, MA: Little Brown & Co, 1995, ISBN 0316075248).
  7. Divergent beliefs about the nature of homosexuality. Religioustolerance.org. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  8. Gay marriage around the globe BBC News, December 22, 2005. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  9. Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in all fifty states and the District of Columbia, all territories except American Samoa, and in some tribal nations.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Alan Bell and Martin Weinberg, Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1978).
  11. 11.0 11.1 David McWhirter and Andrew Mattison, The Male Couple: How Relationships Develop (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1984, ISBN 0135475635).
  12. Tom Smith, American Sexual Behavior: Trends, Socio-Demographic Differences, and Risk Behavior University of Chicago, January 2003. Retrieved January 21. 2021.
  13. P. Gibson, "Gay and Lesbian Youth Suicide" in Marcia R. Fenleib (ed.), Report of the Secretary's Task Force on Youth Suicide, (United States Government Printing Office, 1989, ISBN 0160025087).
  14. Revised Recommendations for Reducing the Risk of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission by Blood and Blood Products - Questions and Answersn U.S. Food and Drug Administration, February 2, 2021. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  15. Robert J. Winn, Ten Things Gay Men should Discuss with their Health Care Providers Gay and Lesbian Medical Association GLMA, May 2012. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  16. Qualification Standards for Enlistment, Appointment, and Induction Department of Defense, December 21, 1993. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  17. Stephen O. Murray, Homosexuality in “Traditional” Sub-Saharan Africa and Contemporary SouthAfrica Le Seminaire Gai. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  18. Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe (eds.), Boy-Wives and Female Husbands: Studies of African Homosexualities. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2001, ISBN 0312238290).
  19. Sabine Lang, John L. Vantine (trans.), Men as women, women as men: Changing gender in Native American cultures (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1998, ISBN 0292747012), 289-298.
  20. Raven Kaldera, Hermaphrodeities The Transgender Spirituality Workbook (Hubbardston, MA: Asphodel Press, 2009, ISBN 0578007916), 44.
  21. Alexandre Coello de la Rosa, “Good Indians”, “Bad Indians”, “What Christians?”: The Dark Side of the New World in Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés (1478-1557) Delaware Review of Latin American Studies 3(2) (2002). Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  22. Michael Rocke, Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and male Culture in Renaissance Florence (Oxford University Press, USA, 1996, ISBN 0195122925).
  23. Guido Ruggiero, The Boundaries of Eros: Sex Crime and Sexuality in Renaissance Venice (Oxford University Press, 1989, ISBN 0195034651).
  24. Stephen O. Murray, Homosexualities (Worlds of Desire: The Chicago Series on Sexuality, Gender, and Culture) (University Of Chicago Press, 2002, ISBN 0226551954), 2.
  25. Theo Sandfort, Judith Schuyf, Jan Willem Duyvendak (eds.), Lesbian and Gay Studies: An Introductory, Interdisciplinary Approach (SAGE Publications Ltd, 2000, ISBN 978-0761954187).
  26. Ryan D. Johnson, Homosexuality: Nature or Nurture AllPsych, April 30, 2003.
  27. Simon LeVay, The Sexual Brain (MIT Press, 1993, ISBN 0262620936).
  28. David Nimmons, Sex and the Brain Discover, March 1, 1994. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  29. Oslo gay animal show draws crowds BBC News, October 19, 2006. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  30. Dinitia Smith, Central Park Zoo's gay penguins ignite debate San Francisco Chronicle, February 7, 2004. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  31. Charles E. Roselli, et al., The Volume of a Sexually Dimorphic Nucleus in the Ovine Medial Preoptic Area/Anterior Hypothalamus Varies with Sexual Partner Preference The Endocrine Society 145(2) (February 1, 2004: 478–483. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  32. John M. Bailey and Richard Pillard, A Genetic Study of Male Sexual Orientation Archives of General Psychiatry Archives of General Psychiatry 48(12) (1991): 1089-1096. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  33. Dave Miller, et al., "This is the Way God Made Me"—A Scientific Examination of Homosexuality and the "Gay Gene" Apologetics Press. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  34. Dean Hamer, et al., A Linkage Between DNA Markers on the X Chromosome and Male Sexual Orientation Science 261(5119) (July 16, 1993): 321-327. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  35. George Rice, Carol Anderson, Neil Risch, and George Ebers, Male Homosexuality: Absence of Linkage to Microsatellite Markers on the X Chromosome in a Canadian Study Science 284(5414) (April 23, 1999): 665-667.
  36. William Byne and Bruce Parsons, Human Sexual Orientation: The Biologic Theories Reappraised Archives of General Psychiatry 50(3) (April 1993):228-39. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  37. Stephen Marc Breedlove, Sex on the brain Nature 389(6653) (October 23, 1997): 801. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  38. David Gelman et al., Born or Bred? Newsweek (February 24, 1992), 46. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  39. E. Villain, "Genetics of Sexual Development." Annual Review of Sex Research 11 (2000)
  40. Glenn Wilson and Qazi Rahman, Born Gay?: The Psychobiology of Sex Orientation (Peter Owen Publishers, 2005, ISBN 0720612233), chapter 5. "Hormones in the womb."
  41. John Thorp, The Social Construction of Homosexuality Phoenix 46(1) (1992): 54-65.
  42. Elizabeth Moberly, Psychogenesis: The Early Development of Gender Identity (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983), 67.
  43. Joseph Nicolosi, Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality (Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson Inc., 1991), 32–35.
  44. Harville Hendrix, Getting the Love You Want: A Couples’ Study Guide (New York: Harper Perennial, 1988), 26.
  45. PATH Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  46. Elizabeth Moberly, Homosexuality: A New Christian Ethic (Greenwood, SC: James Clark & Co., 1983), 9.
  47. E.A. Kaplan, Homosexuality: A Search for the Ego-Ideal Archives of General Psychiatry 16(3) (1967): 355–358. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  48. Irving Bieber et al., Homosexuality: A Psychoanalytic Study of Male Homosexuals (Jason Aronson, Inc., 1962, ISBN 978-0876689899), 44–46.
  49. Gerard van den Aardweg, Homosexuality and Hope: A Psychologist Talks About Treatment and Change (Ann Arbor, MI: Servant Books, 1985), 64.
  50. Robert Kronemeyer, Overcoming Homosexuality (New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1980), 60–71.
  51. Michael Saia, Counseling the Homosexual (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1988), 57–58.
  52. Richard Cohen, Being Gay: Nature, Nurture or Both? (PATH, 2020, ISBN 978-1733846929).
  53. Chastity and homosexuality Catechism of the Catholic Church. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  54. Instruction Concerning the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in view of their Admission to the Seminary and to Holy Orders, Congregation for Catholic Education, November 4, 2005. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  55. Sexual Orientation Laws International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA World). Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  56. Homosexuality in the Light of Islam. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  57. For example, Manu Smriti chapter 8, verse 369, 370. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  58. Manu Smriti, 3.49
  59. Peter Anthony Jackson, Thai Buddhist Accounts of Male Homosexuality and AIDS in the 1980s The Australian Journal of Anthropology 6(3) (1995):140-153. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  60. Leonard Zwilling, "Homosexuality As Seen In Indian Buddhist Texts," in Jose Ignacio Cabezon, (ed.), Buddhism, Sexuality & Gender (State University of New York Press, 1992), 203-214.
  61. Dennis Conkin, His Holiness the Dalai Lama Speaks on Gay matters. June 19, 1997. quietmountain.org. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  62. World Sikh group against gay marriage bill CBC News, March 29, 2005. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  63. What Jains believe. belief.net. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  64. Duli Chandra Jain, "Answers To Some Frequently Asked Questions," in Religious Ethics: A Sourcebook edited by Arthur B. Dobrin, (Mumbai: Hindi Granth Karyalaya, 2004, ISBN 8188769010).
  65. Sandra Wawrytko, "Homosexuality and Chinese and Japanese Religions" in Homosexuality and World Religions, edited by Arlene Swidler, (London: Trinity Press International, 1993. ISBN 156338051X).

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ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

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External links

All links retrieved December 26, 2020.


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