Eefinaldraft 2
Eefinaldraft 2
Eefinaldraft 2
I declare that this essay is my own work and that all sources have been correctly
acknowledged.
International Baccalaureate
31 January, 2017
May 2017
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Abstract
The debate over whether society should come to better accept homosexuality
through issues like same-sex marriage peaked my interest in the topic of sexual
orientation. New debates on ideas of legality and acceptance have called into question
the nature of sexual orientation and the discussion of homosexuality through the
psychology. The aim of this investigation was to reach a conclusion about the biological
aspects of homosexuality and whether it is innate or learned. The question that this
essay addresses is “To what extent does nature influence sexual orientation?” In order
to develop a well structured argument, a wide variety and range of sources were used
to learn about and better understand the ideas and rationale of each argument. The
sources ranged from empirical studies, cultural evaluations, and textbooks such as
Introduction to Biological Psychology and after sources were collected, the strengths
and limitations of all articles, books, and studies were assessed and analyzed. After
conducting the research it was concluded that nature plays a significant role in the
environmental factors. The theories associated with innate homosexuality range from
physical brain makeup to genetics while discrediting the theories supporting the
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Table of Contents
IV. Introduction_____________________________________________________ 4
V. Homosexuality Defined____________________________________________ 5
XII. Conclusion_____________________________________________________ 17
XIII. Bibliography___________________________________________________ 19
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Introduction:
across the country and around the world. Activist groups have been calling for changes
such as gay marriage, easier adoption policies, and over all equal rights. Despite this
change of view, there are still groups who either wish to suppress, or more extremely,
deny the existence of homosexuals due to religious or moral convictions. The increase
of interest in this topic stems from homosexuality being at the center of many modern
day scandals, scare’s, and stories in the news. With news stories and celebrity
a focus in psychology for my essay. To what extent does nature influence sexual
orientation?
through the works of Freud and other psychologists such as DeVault, LeVay, Strong
and Rosenzweig, and a description of both the nature of homosexuality and the
this question one must investigate the background and historical information of
biological level of analysis will be discussed and related to homosexual beliefs and
works of Sigmund Freud and the points made in his “Three Essays on the Theory of
Sexuality”. Finally the counterclaims associated with the topic stating that homosexuality
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is caused by and attributed to “nurture” or “development and learning” will be
Homosexuality Defined:
different factors. According to Balthazart there are english texts that sometimes include
a discussion of sexual orientation. Some of these studies include LeVay, 1993; 1996:
Strong and DeVault, 1997; Rosenzweig et al., 2004; LeVay and Valente, 2006; Agmo,
2007” (p. xi). These studies have been influential in contributing to the classification of
homosexual tendencies (2011). West (1968) states that “Homosexuality simply means
the experience of being erotically attracted to a member of the same sex, and men or
women who habitually experience strong feelings of this kind are called homosexuals”
(2001, p. 10).
West says that homosexuals who engage in sexual acts are called practicing
homosexuals, while exclusive homosexuals are individuals who solely or primarily wish
to have relations with the same-sex. Facultative homosexuals, according to West are
“those who take to homosexual activities only on odd occasions, usually when deprived
of contact with the opposite sex (for instance during imprisonment)” (1968, p. 11).
with the opposite sex. Similar to the use of masturbation in such an instance, this form
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of homosexuality allows for the individual to go through the motions of a sexual
encounter.
Specific to male homosexuality, there are different roles that are played by the
individuals participating in sodomy or anal sex. “The one who inserts the penis during
the act of sodomy is called the ‘active’ partner, the one who receives it is the ‘passive’
partner. Although these roles are commonly interchanged, (...) Some male
sodomy, and may even deny their perversion by pretending that their partner is nothing
more to them than a poor substitute for a woman” states (West 1968, p. 13-14).
“Passive” men are more commonly portrayed by media than their “Active” counterparts,
Homosexuality has been occurring since before the time of the ancient Greeks
and Romans. Despite this fact it is most helpful to start looking at the history of
Roman’s did not have laws against homosexuality and only prosecuted homosexuals in
the case that it was “abuse of a free-born citizen; gender is regardless.” (1980, p. 63).
“unnatural sexual behaviors” (Mondimore, 1996, p. 21). Sodomy covered a wide range
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sodomy could mean anything from bestiality to homosexuality to sexual relations with
members of another religion. Sodomy did not refer to the participants of sex necessarily
such as the term homosexuality. A person did not become a sodomite until participating
The term “Homosexual” did not exist prior to 1869, when it appeared in a
pamphlet that took the form of an open letter to the German minister of justice.
according to Mondimore (1996). Karl Maria Kertbeny, the author of the pamphlet, was
one of the societal members who were beginning to develop the idea of sexual
orientation. Until just under 150 years ago, sexual orientation was not a common term
that people used. Most people opted to steer clear of such topics in conversation which
beliefs that homosexuality was sinful and in the most extreme cases was punishable by
death. This distrust of homosexuals caused them to develop a stigma. A stigma is best
described by Mondimore “He (Erving Goffman) introduced his thoughts with a grisly
explanation of the origin of the word stigma: ‘The Greeks, who were apparently strong
on visual aids, originated the term stigma to refer to bodily signs designed to expose
something as unusual and bad about the moral status of the signifier.... If the visual aid
is missing, the stigma is, at first, invisible. Unlike those stigmatized by their skin color or
physical impairment, these persons are treated as ‘polluted’ only if their invisible stigma
is absent.” (1996, p. 170). This excerpt shows that society’s perception of an individual
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or their beliefs and morals can cause people to see them differently and even as a
For many years there has been a discussion on the causes of psychological
processes. Researchers have recently determined that the best approach to explaining
such causes is to view them as affected by both nature and nurture. According to
modern day science, nature is classified as the individual’s behaviors and make up is
influenced by genes. Nature describes how the individual was made up at birth and to
what extent their actions can be related to that make up. Nurture on the other hand
discusses the way an individual was raised and the implications that their upbringing
has on their life. Factors that could affect an individual that stem from the environment
range from abusive family, sexual abuse, or other traumatic events. Specific to
homosexulaity the environmental factors that could influence it are hotly debated.
With science agreeing that psychological processes and events are influenced by
a combination of both nature and nurture, the question has change from which is the
cause, to which has the most influence. This debate creates the conflict that the essay
addresses “To what extent doe nature influence homosexuality?”. Previously, popular
faiths and belief systems have instilled the idea that homosexuality was influenced
solely by environmental influences. This lead people to the idea that homosexuality was
a choice and could be changed and preventing research on the topic. Now new
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research is being done to determine the influence of nature and finding new evidence
These points are proven by the case Study of David Reimer, as stated in the
book As Nature Made him by John Colapinto, a Canadian born as a male but after an
case was crucial in leading to the idea that both nature and nurture played a role in the
psychological development of individuals. Dr. William Reiner was a surgeon who had
taken intersex children and placed them in a certain sex for them to lead a better life.
However when Reiner met a fourteen year old female patient he discovered that his
efforts had been mislead. According to Colapinto “”I had a complete medical workup on
the child done,” says Reiner. Tests revealed that “she” was biologically a he--a 46XY
male who suffered from a rare chromosomal condition that prevents masculine
differentiation of the genitals.” (2001). This case of the girl who rejected her gender
despite environmental influences finding out she was a girl highlights the importance
Psychology has three levels of analysis in which to look at a topic or issue. The
lense utilized for this essay is the biological level. Philip states that sexual behavior is
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hypothalamus, and nervous system. Each part plays a role in determining how an
individual behaves sexually, but some parts play a larger role than others (1979).
and learns about himself and other members of its species. This is best shown in
layer of cells (zona reticularis) of the adrenal gland secretes gonadotropiclike steroid
hormones, some of which are called weak and androgens … sometimes, however,
frequently due to a hormone-secreting tumor of the adrenal cortex.” (1979, pg. 386) This
and explains why one realizes later in life that they are homosexual. Adolescents are
not aware of their sexual desires due to the lack of active hormones in their
predeveloped bodies. This condition rapidly brings the child into development, and while
it causes them to be developed sexually prematurely, it proves that you cannot know
focuses far less on sexual orientation and puts more emphasis on mating. According to
Philip “It seems almost superfluous to point out that sensory stimuli are important in
eliciting sexual behavior.” (1979, p.387). This quote highlights the obvious fact that in
order for organisms to behave sexually they need to be able to experience sensory
sexual encounter in another way, it shows that this form of sexuallity is innate and
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therefore biological, showing that human sexuality is in fact related to biology and
Hormonal determinants are the most biologically based out of the determinants
listed so far. The hormones that drive sexual attraction are located in the gonads,
otherwise known as the testes and the ovaries. Testosterone and estrogen regulate
your reproductive system as well as balance you levels of femininity and masculinity.
“Steroid hormones secreted by the gonads and the cortex (outer covering) of the
adrenal glands are important in the development and display of of sexual behavior, as
well as affecting the emotions and a variety of physiological processes.” (Philips, 1979,
p. 391). Hormones allow an individual to display sexual behavior, once again relating
Neural control of sexual behavior is the part of your sexuality that is controlled by
the nervous system and brain cortex. Beech experimented with rats in which he gave
them neocortical lesions and then reported the effects. (1940) The results were that rats
who had less than 20 percent of their neocortex destroyed displayed an average sex
drive while those who had more than 60 percent removed did not engage in sexual
relations. According to Phillips the results of this experiment suggest that the neocortex
there is the relationship between the hypothalamus and sexual behavior through sexual
arousal (1979). Brookhart, Dey, and Ranson (1940) showed that small lesions in the
anterior hypothalamus of female guinea pigs would eliminate their sexual arousal.
(Philips, 1979, p. 393). This experiment showed that the hypothalamus, at least the
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anterior hypothalamus, plays a direct role in sexual arousal and therefore behavior
pinpointing a possible area in the brain that controls sexuality. This suggestion adds to
the claim that human sexuality is not influenced primarily by environment but the
his book The Gene: an Intimate History. According to Mukherjee Dean Hamer, a
researcher at the National Cancer Institute discovered a pattern in the family trees of
gay men participating in his 1993 study (2016). There was a trend for the maternal side
of a family to have more homosexual men than the paternal side, meaning that uncles,
cousins, and great-uncles on the mom’s side of the family could be receiving a genetic
By carefully examining the X chromosome and using the Human Genome Project as
guidance, Hamer found a stretch shared by 33 of the men that could affect sexual
orientation known as Xq28 (Mukherjee, 2016, 376-377). The discovery of the pattern in
family trees and the shared DNA on the X chromosome is the newest, and most
convincing evidence that homosexuality does have a genetic basis. This evidence
became even stronger when it was supported by A. R. Sanders et al. (2015) which
males, females and homosexuals. This part of the brain is correlated with what Mielke
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calls “male typical sexual behavior.” LeVay discovered that the male anterior
hypothalamus is much larger than the female and homosexual’s (Mielke, 2006). This is
one of the biological variations that support the idea that homosexuality is biologically
based. This study is once again a correlation and not a causation and should be viewed
(Mielke, 2006, p. 339). This pattern became even stronger and noticeable when viewing
the male relatives related through the maternal line. These men had higher rates of
homosexuality than did those related paternally. This shows that there is a genetic basis
for homosexuality and that it has the potential to be passed down through the sex
in this aspect becomes much more clear as it is not only related through genetics, but
also by human variation showing how a genetic condition that prevents reproduction
In 1905 Sigmund Freud published his famous “Three Essays on the Theory of
Sexuality”. Within these essays Freud discusses Sexual Aberrations, Infantile Sexuality,
and the Transformations of Puberty. According to Freud, “The fact of the existence of
sexual needs in human beings and animals is expressed in biology by the assumption
of a ‘sexual instinct’, on the analogy of the instinct of nutrition, that is of hunger.” (1905,
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p. 135). In this excerpt Freud is saying that all living creatures possess sexual needs
that are comparable to the needs of nutrition, and comparing sex drive to hunger. This
Freud is one of the first individuals to argue that humans were not born
heterosexual. Freud believed that we are born bisexual and that our experiences shape
While this can be used to argue that environment influences sexuality, it is important to
remember that this theory says we are born a specific sexuality and the individual
chooses their sexual orientation based off those environmental influences. When this
theory is connected to those of Beech, LeVay, and Hamer et al., Freud’s argument can
Environmental Influences
There are numerous counterclaims associated with the belief that homosexuality
has a biological basis. These arguments use studies that discuss environmental factors
that have simply a possibility of affecting sexuality but are not guaranteed to do so. In
her book The Biology of Homosexuality, Jacques Balthazart has a chapter in which she
social constructivism (2011). All of these arguments are flawed and do not prove true in
every instance.
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According to Balthazart “One could imagine a young boy, involved in a pedophile
(Churchill, 1967; Cameron & Cameron, 1995).” (2011, p. 12) This concept is similar to
that of animal imprinting in the early stages of a young offsprings life studied by Lorenz
(1937) and Lorenz (1950). This explanation however is not concrete evidence for the
explanation of homosexuality. There are societies across the world who encourage
preserve the virginity of girls. Encouraging homosexual relations at a young age has not
shown a change in the rate of homosexuality in those countries. “The first sexual
experiences of these young boys does not seem to significantly affect their future sexual
In another view of environmental influences, unisex schools have also not shown
an effect on the sexual orientation of adolescents. When placed into unisex schools the
probability of the adolecents to become facultative homsexuals for the time of their
education increases. “It is well known that voluntary homosexual relations occur more
frequently in a unisex education environment.” (Balthazart, 2011, p.14). Men who have
attended unisex schools show the same rate of homosexuality amongst them as
students who attended mixed schools, despite their early aged exposure to facultative
homosexuality.
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Child-parent relationships are commonly considered an important factor when it
comes to determining if a child is, or will become, a homosexual. It is believed that when
a boy is extremely close with his mother and distant from his father, he is or will become
a homosexual man. Despite Freud and Blanchard (1938) stating that this environmental
effect is true, the study was limited by failing to take into account “parental attitudes of
indifference or hostility toward a child” (Balthazart, 2011, p.15). These attitudes may be
not causation, meaning that these relationships may be due to how the parent reacts to
the child’s behavior when it fails to meet their expectations (Balthazart 2011).
contemporary sociology that envisages social reality and social phenomena as being
“built,” i.e., created, institutionalized, and later turned into traditions.” (2011, p. 16). This
theory states that the three most common and accepted sexual orientations, hetero-,
homo-, and bisexual, are in fact created by society and therefore have no biological or
cognitive basis. This is disproven due to the fact that the theory would have to therefore
apply to other categorizations such as gender. When attempting to apply this theory to
gender, Balthazart reminds the reader that “Although gender role is largely socially
determined, as noted at the beginning of the book, sex steroids also clearly have an
experience could be traumatic and aversive (e.g., rape of a girl by a man) and induce a
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repulsion for members of the same sex as the perpetrator of the assault” (2011, p. 13)
This description of an event is the only idea that supports the environmental influence
on homosexuality and accepts it to be valid. This point is correct because it shows that
trauma has an effect on the brain and our ability to interact socially, showing that it is an
Conclusion:
Homosexuality is constantly a debate due to the movement for equal rights for
not it is ethical is not the true question. Through the works of Freud and other
and the viewpoints are beginning to reflect a more positive light. With research
extracting more proof about the biological basis of homosexuality, society’s viewpoints
This discovery of information through studies such as LeVay (1991), Hamer et al.
(1993), and A. R. Sanders et al. (2015), have increased the understanding of the role
nature on homosexuality. This is important because studies such as these not only
allow us to become more accepting as a society, but to learn more about our genetics
and the numerous ways in which we are made unique. The findings of modern day
science that support my claim are influential in today’s society as they are contributing
to the evolution of thoughts and beliefs. With the idea that homosexuality is not learned
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but genetic, individuals are becoming more open to and understanding of the
homosexual community.
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Bibliography
Balthazart, J. (2011). The biology of homosexuality. New York: Oxford University Press.
Colapinto, J. (2000). As nature made him: The boy who was raised as a girl. New York:
HarperCollins.
Freud, S., Strachey, J., Freud, A., Strachey, A., & Tyson, A. (1960). The standard
edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud. London:
Hogarth Press.
Mielke, J. H., Konigsberg, L. W., & Relethford, J. (2006). Human biological variation.
New York: Oxford University Press.
Myers, D. G. (2011). Myer's Psychology for AP. New York, NY: Worth.
Pronk, P., Vriend, J., & Hart, H. (1993). Against nature?: Types of moral argumentation
regarding homosexuality. Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans.
Sexual Orientation and Health Among U.S. Adults: National ... (2014, July 15).
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