WMA Statement on Natural Variations of Human Sexuality
... people based on their sexual orientation. The WMA calls upon all physicians to classify physical and psychological diseases on the basis of clinically relevant symptoms according to ICD-10 criteria regardless of sexual orientation, and to provide therapy in accordance with internationally recognised ...
... people based on their sexual orientation. The WMA calls upon all physicians to classify physical and psychological diseases on the basis of clinically relevant symptoms according to ICD-10 criteria regardless of sexual orientation, and to provide therapy in accordance with internationally recognised ...
homo - WordPress.com
... in the X chromosome. 33/40 pairs of homosexual brothers shared certain DNA. This was later criticised for making simplistic ...
... in the X chromosome. 33/40 pairs of homosexual brothers shared certain DNA. This was later criticised for making simplistic ...
Kin Selection Hypothesis Kin Selection Hypothesis
... code for sexual orientation per se but for childhood temperaments that influence a child’s preferences for sex-typical or sexatypical activities. • These preferences lead children to feel different from opposite-sex or same-sex peers—to perceive them as “exotic.” • This, in turn, produces heightened ...
... code for sexual orientation per se but for childhood temperaments that influence a child’s preferences for sex-typical or sexatypical activities. • These preferences lead children to feel different from opposite-sex or same-sex peers—to perceive them as “exotic.” • This, in turn, produces heightened ...
Homosexual Activity Among Animals Stirs Debate
... instance, male dolphin calves often form temporary sexual partnerships, which scientists believe help to establish lifelong bonds. Such sexual behavior has been documented only relatively recently. Zoologists have been accused of skirting round the subject for fear of stepping into a political minef ...
... instance, male dolphin calves often form temporary sexual partnerships, which scientists believe help to establish lifelong bonds. Such sexual behavior has been documented only relatively recently. Zoologists have been accused of skirting round the subject for fear of stepping into a political minef ...
Sexual orientation
... Important Things to Remember “Most of today’s psychologists therefore view sexual orientation as neither willfully chosen nor willfully changed. Sexual orientation in some ways is like handedness: Most people are one way, some the other. A very few are truly ambidextrous. Regardless, the way one is ...
... Important Things to Remember “Most of today’s psychologists therefore view sexual orientation as neither willfully chosen nor willfully changed. Sexual orientation in some ways is like handedness: Most people are one way, some the other. A very few are truly ambidextrous. Regardless, the way one is ...
Sexual Orientation
... – Reiss’ explanation of cross-cultural differences o 1. societies that have high maternal & low father involvement w/infants, and that have rigid gender roles, have the highest incidence of male homosexuality o 2. in less gender rigid societies with more permissiveness about sexuality, individuals f ...
... – Reiss’ explanation of cross-cultural differences o 1. societies that have high maternal & low father involvement w/infants, and that have rigid gender roles, have the highest incidence of male homosexuality o 2. in less gender rigid societies with more permissiveness about sexuality, individuals f ...
spitzerhk.pps - Christian Mental Health
... J. Madeleine Nash, Time, April 27, 1998 p. 60-61 “Unlike the genes that are responsible for physical traits, Hamer emphasizes, these genes do not cause people to become homosexuals,” “Still, as critics emphasize & Hamer himself acknowledges, genes alone do not control the chemistry of the brain. Ult ...
... J. Madeleine Nash, Time, April 27, 1998 p. 60-61 “Unlike the genes that are responsible for physical traits, Hamer emphasizes, these genes do not cause people to become homosexuals,” “Still, as critics emphasize & Hamer himself acknowledges, genes alone do not control the chemistry of the brain. Ult ...
Sexual Preference (book)
Sexual Preference: Its Development in Men and Women is a 1981 book about the development of sexual orientation by psychologist Alan P. Bell and sociologists Martin S. Weinberg and Sue Kiefer Hammersmith, a publication of the Institute for Sex Research. Together with its separately published Statistical Appendix, Sexual Preference was the culmination of a series of books including Homosexuality: An Annotated Bibliography (1972) and Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women (1978), both authored jointly by Bell and Weinberg. Based on interviews with subjects in the San Francisco Bay Area, Bell, Weinberg and Hammersmith found almost no correlation between early family experience and adult sexual orientation and therefore concluded that heterosexuality and homosexuality have a biological basis. Though Sexual Preference is one of the most frequently cited retrospective studies relating to sexual orientation, its authors' conclusions and methodology have been criticized on numerous grounds, including their reliance upon path analysis and the difficulty and potential unreliability of adult recall of childhood feeling.