< The trait in question could be a necessary byproduct of two evolutionarily 
sound items; for example, an armpit appears when you combine a torso with an 
arm, but no animal was ever selected specifically for having armpits! >

Well, here's to the novelty and versatility of natural design:  My dog has 
determined an armpit has two appealing properties.  1) it is warm for her head 
while she sleeps, and 2) her location can be proven without opening her eyes 
(she sometimes forgets).

Marcus
________________________________
From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> on behalf of Eric Charles 
<eric.phillip.char...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 11:04 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] gene complex for homosexuality

Re potential evolutionary explanations for homosexuality: They really don't 
have to be very convoluted at all.

I prepared a worksheet for a class 15 or so years ago, after a bunch of 
students starting trying use homosexuality as proof that evolution couldn't 
explain (any) behavior. I'd rather just link to the blog... but to make things 
easier for other's, I'll also copy-paste below: Fixing Psychology: Evolution 
and 
Homosexuality<https://fixingpsychology.blogspot.com/2012/03/evolution-and-homosexuality.html>

====================

Evolution and Homosexuality

Evolutionary theorists could potentially explain homosexuality using three 
distinct methods. The first two take the modern notion of homosexuality at face 
value, the third questions it.

1.    Explain homosexuality as a benefit in and of itself.

The most straightforward way to explain the presence of any trait using 
evolutionary logic is to tell a story about how individuals with that trait 
reproduce their genes better than those without the trait. In the case of 
exclusive homosexuality, that is difficult, because homosexuals do not 
reproduce. However, it is still possible.

For example, a costly traits may be so helpful to your relatives (i.e., your 
kin) that it more than makes up for the cost you pay. This is called “kin 
selection”. Your children will share 50% of your genes, so we can give them a 
value of .5 in terms of your reproduction. A full sibling’s children share 25% 
of your genes, so we can give them a value of .25. That means that if you 
posses a trait that makes you have one less child on average (-.5), but you get 
three more nephews or nieces in exchange (+.75), natural selection will favor 
that trait (= .25). On average, the next generation will have more of your 
genes by virtue of your possessing a trait that makes you have fewer children. 
This explanation could be even more powerful when applied your own parents, 
i.e., helping raise your brothers and sisters, with whom you share as many 
genes as your own children (both .5).

If that was the explanation for human homosexuality, what might you also expect 
to be true of homosexuality?


2.    Explain homosexuality as a byproduct of other adaptive mechanisms.

There are many types of explanations compatible with evolutionary theory, but 
that do not explain the traits under questions as adaptations in and of 
themselves. In one way or another, these explanations explain traits as the 
byproduct of some other adaptive process. The trait in question could be a 
necessary byproduct of two evolutionarily sound items; for example, an armpit 
appears when you combine a torso with an arm, but no animal was ever selected 
specifically for having armpits! Alternatively, the trait in question could be 
the result of an adaptive mechanism placed in an unusual context; for example, 
evolution favored humans that desired sweet and fatty food in an environment 
where such things were rare; now that we are in an environment where such 
things are plentiful, this desire can cause serious health problems. 
Homosexuality could be explainable in terms of biological or psychological 
mechanisms acting appropriately in odd circumstances, or as a byproduct of 
selection for other beneficial traits.

If that explanation were correct, what types of traits might humans have been 
selected for that could result in homosexuality when pushed to the extreme or 
placed in unusual circumstances?

3.    Reject the notion of homosexuality as it is currently conceived and offer 
new categories.

Evolutionary thinking often necessitates a rejection of old categories and the 
creation of new ones. The current systems of dividing the world may not be 
relevant to answering evolutionary questions. The labels “Homosexual” and 
“Heterosexual” may be good examples. The modern notions of strict homo vs. 
hetero-sexuality arose relatively recently. It has never been bizarrely 
uncommon for women or men to live together or to set up long term relationships 
with members of the same sex. What is relatively new is the notion that this 
can divide people into types, some who exclusively do one thing and some who 
exclusively do another.  A so-called homosexual man need only have sex with a 
woman once to have a baby, and visa versa. While this is now the stuff of 
comedic amusement, it may be a much more natural context for homosexuality. 
There may be no reason to think that so-called homosexuals of the past got 
pregnant, or impregnated others, less often than so-called hetersexuals.

If this is the case, would there necessarily be any selection for or against 
preferring the relatively exclusive company of same-sex others? What possible 
benefits could there be to raising children in a “homosexual” environment? (Hey 
now, don’t bring moral judgment into this, it is only a question of surviving 
and thriving.)
<mailto:echar...@american.edu>

============================

On Sat, Jan 8, 2022 at 6:13 PM ⛧ glen 
<geprope...@gmail.com<mailto:geprope...@gmail.com>> wrote:
I'm in an ongoing argument with a gay friend about how tortured Darwinian 
arguments are in accounting for homosexuality. He claims they're VERY 
torturous. I'm inclined toward the first mentioned here: 
https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-26089486

But, were group selection and/or cultural evolution a thing, then my friend 
would be more right. Anyone here have a strong opinion?

--
glen ⛧


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