Deleted User wrote: » Not really. It depends what your Set is to make the definition. Of all the many many many things I drink - one single drink happens to be tequila. A positive hit on one member of a Set is enough to apply the label for you personally.
I just do not think that is a useful linguistic heuristic in general. I suspect language would fall apart if we were to take that approach universally. But we do not seem to.
Then I am somehow not communicating myself correctly as that would be exactly how I would _not_ describe what I am saying. Rather with my Venn/Sets dynamic what I am saying is that any individual falls into a number of Sets. And any number of those Sets could be what triggers sexual and-or romantic attraction.
I think the people who would consider someone like my partners "bi" despite them never being attracted to women before or since each other - are merely assuming that sexual attraction is based on one single Set. Gender. Whereas everything I know about them - or they describe in themselves - suggests their romantic and physical love is _despite_ their gender not because of it.
But since you mentioned research there have indeed been articles and studies done on showing that straight men are aroused by gay porn and vice versa. An article in Archives of Sexual Behavior for example. While a study from the University of Essex found straight women are likely to be turned on by both men and women. And there are good nerological reasons as to why this would be so.
But linguistically - to move away from sexuality - I also think that while the meaning of words should not be set in stone - very much the opposite - some threshold of consistency is required for a word to be meaningful or useful. And if someone is attracted solely and predominantly to the opposite sex with _one sole individual exception_ - then with strong pedantry I am sure we can call that person "bisexual" but I wonder if the word applied that loosely really leaves it meaning all that much at all or what anyone or anything could gain by even bothering to force the peg into that hole.
Sometimes I fear people are more interested in clinging to making words fit - than caring what they are actually communicating. A divide between language purists and communication purists I suppose.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Provided they're a consenting adult.
Wibbs wrote: » I'd raise the same quizzical eyebrow if a gay lad I knew started a romantic/emotional relationship with a woman and still claimed he was wholly gay. It's akin to someone claiming to be a vegan but eats a rare steak once a week.
Wibbs wrote: » Eh, yes it does. If you claim you don't drink tequila, but then go on to say that why yes I drink one particular tequila, you are a tequila drinker.
Wibbs wrote: » We kinda do tend to use descriptors that follow plain logic.
Wibbs wrote: » Straight people are attracted to their opposite gender, gay people are attracted to their gender, bisexual people are attracted to both to varying degrees. Your partners are sexually attracted to each other and follow through with physical intimacy
Wibbs wrote: » The vast bulk of studies into this reinforces my original point.
Wibbs wrote: » Otherwise why have descriptors at all?
Wibbs wrote: » Now I get that some are into that. It's very popular a notion in some circles. No labels.
Mountainsandh wrote: » I voted unsure, because even though my first reaction was to think "yeah ban it, ban it real good", then I thought "nah, Nanny state".
Deleted User wrote: » Eh, no it does not. What it means is I am a drinker of a wide variety of liquids only one of which happens to be a single and particular brand of tequila. And even at that only a rare indulgence. As I suggested - without at least _some_ minimum level of consistency behind definitions we would end up defining everyone as everything. And I for one am thankful language does not work that way. I smoke marijuana about once every 5 years. I would not _define_ myself as a marijuana smoker in that regard either or see any reason why I might or should.
Similarly if my relationship broke down and you were at a party with one of my exs and a girl said to you "Wow she is super hot - you think I have any chance with her" then you would be setting her up for disappointment - and for her feeling you had misled her - by saying "Well she _is_ bisexual so go for it" rather than if you told her "Well although she was in a same sex relationship for a time - she is actually straight".
I can similarly take gender out of it entirely to describe the same thing in a fashion a little less likely to trigger any linguistic purism. Imagine a trait that is for you a massive turn off. Maybe you do not like seriously fat girls. Maybe you are turned off mightily by severely crossed eyes. I just have no idea. But let us go with fat people for now - no offence to fat people. They are a serious turn off for you in this rhetorical. You simply are not and never have been turned on sexually by them - quite the opposite. But then you meet someone who you connect with on so many levels that your feelings for them reach a point you want to express them and explore them in every way - including sexually. This individual and what she is is a member of all the "Sets" that trigger your sexual and romantic interests. I do not think it is right to then say "Wibbs is sexually into fat girls". I would think it right to say "Wibbs is not into fat girls - but he is very much into Nadia here".
I do not think - I am not seeing - any difference there just because we are speaking of gender rather than some other trait.
I think you rely too much on a "therefore" that does not hold. You went from "They are bisexual with each other" to "therefore they are bisexual". And that is not a logical leap I think you can simply make and gloss over. They are two entirely different statements bringing entirely different implications to a listener were you to use them. The latter would - in a way the former would not - lead the impartial 3rd party listener to false conclusions about the people described.
And if for example a man who identifies as entirely straight found themselves aroused by - say - pornography of a homosexual nature - that would not imply they are in any way homosexual. And in fact I do seem to recall threads of that very nature on boards in the past. Where guys have shown up in the LGBT forum on boards saying they were worried and confused for exactly that reason. A confusion we would not have helped them through by any level of linguistic purity and pedantry that attempted to tell them "If you are sexually attracted to guys you are homo or bi sexual" when they know themselves they are not. People have a tendency to switch off and stop listening to a speaker - if the speaker is telling them they are something they know with every fibre of their own being that they are not.
Rather what I am saying is that the "No labels" movement is a poor one indeed (we seem to agree on that so always pays to peg a flag into common ground) - but that when we apply labels too liberally off the back of - say - a single positive hit in an otherwise massive set - the we dilute the utility of those labels to the point we are functionally in the same realm as the "no label movement" - and so equally fecked for the same reasons. Like you entirely correctly and astutely put it - we end up then having to make more and more and more labels to accommodate a single initial error and failing on our own part.
It was another user of boards who put it better than I am - though I suspect he was borrowing it from Christopher Hitchens - but the phrase if I recall was "A word that comes to mean too much - actually ends up meaning nothing".
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » Can we have a separate "**** on about tequila" thread please?
Wibbs wrote: » The fact remains You're still an occasional tequila drinker and you are an occasional pot smoker.
Wibbs wrote: » Or I'd say the possibility is there as she was in a same sex relationship. If she'd never been in a same sex relationship I'd say the possibility was much more remote.
Wibbs wrote: » Or "it seems he is open to fat women in certain circumstances".
Wibbs wrote: » Though I think sexual orientation and traits that are a turn off in one's preferred gender are not comparable to the degree you are comparing them.
Wibbs wrote: » Are they sexually attracted to and having sexual relations with another woman? Yes. Are they sexually attracted to and having sexual relations with a man? Yes. ergo they are by definition bisexual. They are not exclusively straight. To claim that they are makes a nonsense of language.
Wibbs wrote: » Just as likely they're buying into the silly stigma that still surrounds being gay.
Wibbs wrote: » If I found myself seeking out gay porn because it turned me on, or I dunno was having thoughts of a sexual nature that included men(or an individual man) I'd have zero issue with saying it seems I'm mostly straight, but have some tendency towards being bisexual.
Deleted User wrote: » Ah but see - you are now introducing qualifiers - moving from calling me outright a tequila drinker to now qualifying it with extra descriptors. The error of your initial descriptor of me now requires you introduce the modifier "occasional".
The second error in your own definition - is you mention "having sexual relations with". And that is entirely beside the point. Your sexuality is defined by who you are generally sexually attracted to - not at all who you have sex with. A gay man - for example - who decides to hide his homosexuality - marry and copulate and procreate with a woman for all his life - is still a homosexual. Who he is having sex with has literally nothing to do with what his sexuality is.
Wibbs wrote: » Ah sure I know Dr F. It's just when I read the ever shifting sands that passes for this post 60's "hippie" mixed with 70's postmodernist swirling nebulous nonsense masquerading as somehow insightful stuff I just can't resist... Though it's like trying to pick up water with a fork. Because they have no clear positions, save for one; that life/politics/art/gender/culture/sexuality and anything else are a series of endless interpretations depending on individualistic and usually self defined viewpoints. They appear to have positions, but the sands are constantly shifting and the goalposts constantly moving. It's the philosophy of grey areas and cognitive dissonance. Note his take that gender is just another "trait", no different to bodyweight or any other trait. There is no trait weighted above another, all and none are equal in this philosophy.EG TaxAH has convinced himself he's not a tequila drinker, yet he drinks tequila. His partners are wholly straight/not bi, yet are sexually attracted and active with each other and him.
dr.fuzzenstein wrote: » Heteroflexible may be the word.
Wibbs wrote: » Because they have no clear positions, save for one; that life/politics/art/gender/culture/sexuality and anything else are a series of endless interpretations depending on individualistic and usually self defined viewpoints.
Wibbs wrote: » Note his take that gender is just another "trait", no different to bodyweight or any other trait. There is no trait weighted above another, all and none are equal in this philosophy.
Wibbs wrote: » On bisexuality and sexuality in general(and horrid Mexican spirits) its seems it's a numbers game.
Wibbs wrote: » You are a tequila drinker. You drink tequila.
Wibbs wrote: » The gay guy is hiding his sexuality.
Wibbs wrote: » fecked if I know. As I said coming from such a position a vegan could eat a steak once a month and still feel and claim they're a vegan.
Deleted User wrote: » Similarly if my relationship broke down and you were at a party with one of my exs and a girl said to you "Wow she is super hot - you think I have any chance with her" then you would be setting her up for disappointment - and for her feeling you had misled her - by saying "Well she _is_ bisexual so go for it" rather than if you told her "Well although she was in a same sex relationship for a time - she is actually straight". So the question becomes which is more interesting to a speaker - to be linguistically pedantically right in forcing terms to be "right" when they feel it is right - or to use language for it's basic main intention and goal - to convey factual and useful information in a way that makes it most accurate and informative in the brain of the recipient. I go with the second option myself. To use words and labels in a way that will give the person I speak with the most accurate representation of what is actually true. YMMV. None of what you say here is false - but also none of it is contradicting what I am saying either. So there is a "talking past each other" warning light that should be going off in both our heads at this time. Again being sexually attracted to someone _despite_ their gender is different to being attracted to them _in light of it_. And someone who is in a relationship with someone of the same sex - but does not identify as bi - is likely an example of the former. .
Deleted User wrote: » I am pointing out that what sexuality you are has absolutely nothing to do with who you are actually having sex with.
sbsquarepants wrote: » I find your posts very interesting I have to say and I usually find myself agreeing with most of what you say, but not this - this is patently nonsense. If anyone, as in the case of your missus(es) find themselves attracted to and regularly having sex with both men and women, or man and woman, as the was the case may be - then that is the dictionary definition of bi-sexuality. It's an absolute nonsense to describe it as anything else.
Rory28 wrote: » Can you elaborate on this? I mean if I sleep with a guy I usually assume he is at the very least bi. I don't think a straight lad ends up in bed with another bloke unless he isn't straight.
Dial Hard wrote: » Lads, we get it, you're both towering intellectuals with massive vocabularies. Can we move on now?
Deleted User wrote: » Sure thanks for asking Quite a lot of Male Prostitutes are straight. So true is this in fact that the CDC have created a category called "MSM" or "Men who have sex with men" to incorporate otherwise straight people into groupings they are otherwise usually left out of. They recognise that groups based on sexuality and groupings based on actual sexual activity are massively different. And for the purposes of disease control and study the former was the wrong one to use. Also I gave the example of a homosexual who lives the live of a heterosexual. He finds a woman - spends his life copulating and procreating with her - but he is still a homosexual. His relationship with her is _despite_ his orientation. Also think of a homosexual who is celebate. Never had sex and never plans to. He is still a homosexual though. Why? Because he is attracted to men. He does not have to actually have sex with one to become a homosexual. Summary: Every definition of sexuality out there is rooted in who you are generally attracted to. Not who you have sex with.
Deleted User wrote: » That is fine. The best people to disagree with are the ones who usually agree with you Makes for a much better interaction I find. And the compliment you offer here is one I would throw word for word back at you. I read all your stuff too. .
Deleted User wrote: » Can you tell me which dictionary definition you refer to though as I provided some in my post and it does not appear to support what you say here. And I explained why in the post above so I wont bore anyone further by repeating it .
Top definition Bisexual Someone who is in all ways attracted to both guys and girls. It is not because they are sex fanatics, or simply can't decide. Being bisexual is not a phase from people who haven't fully come out yet. It is as real as being straight or gay. You might have a preference over one sex, but bisexual means you can be attracted to both genders sexually, physically, and emotionally. In other words, you are fully capable of FALLING IN LOVE with them,just as a woman would fall in love with a man. It's not a circus freak thing. Sally fúcked Jack and Jill, and enjoyed them both.
Deleted User wrote: » Quite a lot of Male Prostitutes are straight. .
Deleted User wrote: » Summary: Every definition of sexuality out there is rooted in who you are generally attracted to. Not who you have sex with.
Rory28 wrote: » why would they have sex with someone they feel nothing for beyond the platonic feelings of friendship?
Deleted User wrote: » I hope what I wrote in an earlier post helps to reduce your concern there though. Which is to say that we can establish a minimum threshold of concern before we go around banning things. Going around banning and controlling _Everything_ we do not like would very much be "nanny state" stuff. But going around saying "well that is measurably worse than most things - we have good reason to ban that" is not. GCT unlike - say - homeopathy for example - is not just inventing an exploitative cure - it is inventing the disease too. I think that makes it objectively worse than most things others might want to ban. There is a difference there from saying "This will cure your headache" because at least headaches are a thing. They are something people have good reason to want to cure or reduce. With GCT however they are not doing that. Rather than are establishing homosexuality as something _to be cured_. And that makes it objectively worse in many ways. And I would not feel like I am "Nanny stating" the issue for addressing it.
sbsquarepants wrote: » The only one worth bothering with.....URBAN Sounds like your setup to me?
sbsquarepants wrote: » They clearly aren't equal opportunity, 50/50 bisexual but the also clearly aren't straight.
sbsquarepants wrote: » But the 2 girls are attracted to each other are they not?
Mountainsandh wrote: » Breast enlargement/reduction now. The fact that it's available would sort of suggest that people's breasts may not be adequate.
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