Druidus
Keeper of the Grove
Now, obviously no one has all the answers on this topic. But I'd like to put forth a hypothesis of mine concerning the survival and societal benefits of homosexuality (in a portion of a species' population).
If homosexuality persists, generation after generation, then there must be some reproductive advantage to the species, even if not direct or immediately apparent. I can extend this to any animal, but let's just use humans. Humans are semi-monogamous by nature. We were in the process of shifting towards a more monogamous pattern of mating when we started developing our civilizations. So while we may have kept the idea of one woman to one man as an ideal (often promoted through religion), in practice it would not have been uncommon to see more than one wife per male, perhaps 2-5 (depending on social status/power and other variables). But this is a problem, because the birth ratio is close to 1:1, or one male to every female in the entire population. When there are not enough females to go around for all (or most) of the males, there will be social chaos. Fierce competition for existing females in a such a situation actually drives down group survival as a whole. This pattern has been observed multiple times throughout history, and having too few females for the males in a society is just bloodshed and social struggle waiting to happen.
But what if a number of those males aren't into females? What if they're gay? Well that leaves a number of "free" women, without a suitable male, who would be available to a socially powerful polygamous male without contest and without provoking social problems. And the gay males would be promoting intragroup bonding. So good news all around!
(I'll try to explain better when I have an actual keyboard.)
Anyway, I'm typing this on an ipod, and I hate typing on this, so I'll stop there. I hope I got the gist of my idea across. Please excuse typos or anything I was unclear on, I don't have the patience to edit it on this device. I think it has some potential in explaining why homosexuality persists through generations, even if it's not the whole picture. I know it doesn't explain it all. That said, what do you think about it? And what are your ideas on the evolutionary persistence of homosexuality? I'd love to hear more perspectives!
If homosexuality persists, generation after generation, then there must be some reproductive advantage to the species, even if not direct or immediately apparent. I can extend this to any animal, but let's just use humans. Humans are semi-monogamous by nature. We were in the process of shifting towards a more monogamous pattern of mating when we started developing our civilizations. So while we may have kept the idea of one woman to one man as an ideal (often promoted through religion), in practice it would not have been uncommon to see more than one wife per male, perhaps 2-5 (depending on social status/power and other variables). But this is a problem, because the birth ratio is close to 1:1, or one male to every female in the entire population. When there are not enough females to go around for all (or most) of the males, there will be social chaos. Fierce competition for existing females in a such a situation actually drives down group survival as a whole. This pattern has been observed multiple times throughout history, and having too few females for the males in a society is just bloodshed and social struggle waiting to happen.
But what if a number of those males aren't into females? What if they're gay? Well that leaves a number of "free" women, without a suitable male, who would be available to a socially powerful polygamous male without contest and without provoking social problems. And the gay males would be promoting intragroup bonding. So good news all around!
(I'll try to explain better when I have an actual keyboard.)
Anyway, I'm typing this on an ipod, and I hate typing on this, so I'll stop there. I hope I got the gist of my idea across. Please excuse typos or anything I was unclear on, I don't have the patience to edit it on this device. I think it has some potential in explaining why homosexuality persists through generations, even if it's not the whole picture. I know it doesn't explain it all. That said, what do you think about it? And what are your ideas on the evolutionary persistence of homosexuality? I'd love to hear more perspectives!
Last edited: