- 05 Nov 2018 20:57
#14960197
Well it would be an interesting fact, but to become a fact you need to eliminate everything. And that is unlikely going to happen due to everything being an awful lot. So a waste of study IMO over something that is trivial.
Nonetheless being random does have more evidence to it than genetics, nurture and culture - some of things being speculated on this thread. How is it possible for identical twins with the same background having different sexual orientation if any of these things are a factor? Perhaps answer that rather than debating Walrus mating rituals.
Kaiserschmarrn wrote:If they are random, that would be an interesting fact as well and random processes can be investigated just like deterministic ones. It's actually quite possible that there's a random element to our behaviour and thoughts which is why I mentioned probabilistic constraints in an earlier post.
Well it would be an interesting fact, but to become a fact you need to eliminate everything. And that is unlikely going to happen due to everything being an awful lot. So a waste of study IMO over something that is trivial.
Nonetheless being random does have more evidence to it than genetics, nurture and culture - some of things being speculated on this thread. How is it possible for identical twins with the same background having different sexual orientation if any of these things are a factor? Perhaps answer that rather than debating Walrus mating rituals.