Geneticists explain all human behavior as a 'side effect'
by
lurker2209
06/25/2008, 5:22 PM #
Saletan
does a nice job of explaining sexually antagonistic selection and poses
some interesting Bioethics 101 type questions about how the gay
community might react to the scientific idea that homosexuality (at
least in males) is a 'side effect'.
The thing is, this paper
suggests that among genetic theories, sexually antagonistic selection
is the best at predicting observed fertility levels in a sample population. But each of those theories proposes
that some relative of the homosexual benefits from the gene while the
homosexual does not (from strictly a fertility perspective).
The other big theory in competition to sexually antagonistic selection is overdominance.
In that case, the male relatives of a homosexual are more fertile.(In
this case, Homosexuality is caused when one copy of a new gene makes a
man straight and more fertile, while two copies make a man gay. Most
of the actually theories involve variations where there are actually multiples genes of this type interacting, but that's the basic version).
With
the maternal effects theories, a gene the mother carries 'feminizes'
the developing fetus, which increases the fertility of female offspring
and decreases the fertility of the male offspring.
Even the kinship selection theory, which has fallen out of favor in the scientific community, proposes a general benefit to the fertility of the relatives of the homosexual man, due to his increased involvement in rearing their children.
In that light, the questions Saletan poses are not as premature as they seem. These questions about how scientific genetic explanations for homosexuality won't go
away if later science refutes this particular theory in favor of
another one. But I really don't see this idea of homosexuality as a
side effect of an increased fertility elsewhere as a particular
threat. I don't expect a theory like this, even if overwhelmingly supported by scientific evidence, to affect the way gay people perceive themselves. Geneticists explain almost all human behavior in terms of a benefit to survival or fertility for someone. Even if, like me, you're a scientists who understands and generally accepts these types of explanations, it doesn't normally change the way we perceive our behavior. That too is a genetic trait that increases our survival advantage. :)