Incest.

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Grey_Focks

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Jan 12, 2010
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I honestly don't care, but I DO question the mental health of anyone who wants to have sex with a close relative.
 

HTID Raver

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Jan 7, 2010
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hell yeah its wrong! imoral, disgusting and against the law!

like that one story a while back about some 70 year old woman in an relationship with her grandson... like seriously! what the hell?!
 

Gasaraki

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Oct 15, 2009
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I don't really see what's wrong with it as long as everyone's consenting and old enough. If they have kids though then that's a bit different because then the kid will most likely suffer (illness and what-not).
 

Wedlock49

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Funkiest Monkey said:
EDIT: I sound like an out-raged parent on a chat-show. Haha. But seriously, I am very against incest just like I am against Paedophilia and Necrophilia.
I've got to say I think that's a little strong!

ImprovizoR said:
You use words like morally wrong. Morality depends on culture, society and their views. It's not a constant. And it has a meter. On one side is the morally right, and on the other is morally wrong. In modern society incest is in the morally wrong area. So from a moral standpoint it is immoral because society says it is. I know what you said about "just cuz" argument but this is basically it. Like I said, morality is not a constant. It changes and it varies from culture to culture.
Morality is also something expressed by people and different people have different morals.

kaizen2468 said:
I think someone has it bad for his sister.
I'm sorry, no. It happens to be your mother that I'm interested in.
 

Eldarion

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BGH122 said:
Eldarion said:
After all your brain is wired not to be attracted to siblings or offspring for very good reasons.
Is it? Where's the proof for this, where's the proof it's not behaviourally or cognitively learnt?
You want me to prove what has been established as biological fact?

Edit= never mind I stand corrected on this one.
 

ShadowsofHope

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Nov 1, 2009
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I'm fine with incestuous relationships if others find themselves wanting them, but I personally have no desire of it. Reproduction within incestuous relations tends to almost always be very genetically and physiologically dysfunctional though, which leads me to highly question any attempts within those relationships for such.

Only when one of the members of the "relationship" cannot consent (or isn't human), is when I draw the line personally. Like marriage to pillowcases, or bestiality.
 

Loop Stricken

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Jun 17, 2009
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BGH122 said:
Loop Stricken said:
BGH122 said:
Eldarion said:
After all your brain is wired not to be attracted to siblings or offspring for very good reasons.
Is it? Where's the proof for this, where's the proof it's not behaviourally or cognitively learnt?
I assume he's referring to this [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westermarck_effect#Westermarck_and_Freud] or something along those lines.
Please see above.
Dun wanna. Really[ don't care all that much about this sort of thing; I only commented as, after readin the OP, my brain threw up Westermarck and I thought I'd be clever enough for nobody else to know.
Alas.
 

RanD00M

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Oct 26, 2008
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If you want to bang your sibling,and your sibling is okay with it.Then go ahead.Just as long as you don't reproduce,it's no matter with me.
 

manaman

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BGH122 said:
Eldarion said:
After all your brain is wired not to be attracted to siblings or offspring for very good reasons.
Is it? Where's the proof for this, where's the proof it's not behaviourally or cognitively learnt?
Actually there is proof, it's not necessarily biological family members, so much as the people you are raised with. Studies turn up people who where adopted who where not attracted to their siblings in their family who met their real siblings and admitted to some form of attraction to them.

It's not learned behavior either, most people are not attracted to people they where raised with.
 

s0denone

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Apr 25, 2008
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Sure, what the problem with a father fucking his daughter? That's completely normal.

Are you fucking kidding me? This is a deranged thread, right from the off. "Just cuz'" not being accepted as an argument because you already know that basically the only argument there is, when you count "Because it's wrong" and "Not morally, socially or ethically acceptable" as "Just cuz'".

This is a damn joke.

No, incest is not okay. Not now. Not ever. Not in any case, ever.
 

Helmutye

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Sep 5, 2009
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I must admit I am quite surprised at how this thread has gone so far. I make no judgments, but I would not have guessed it ahead of time!

As far as the brain being wired to not be attracted to siblings or offspring, that is not as simple as you might think. There is a critical period during childhood development, during which you will develop that sort of aversion to sex with a sibling. However, there are cases where siblings have been separated early in life and thus have not developed that aversion. Usually what happens is that, if they do not have this early development aversion, they are INCREDIBLY attracted to each other because they have so many similarities in behavior and temperament. In other words, the "natural" aversion siblings have to each other comes about because of environment, not genetics. Sibling incest is by far the most common form, followed by father-child incest.

As far as parent-child incest, I'm not sure about the psychological mechanisms. I know that mother-son incest is the rarest form, and considering how much psychological rewiring occurs when a woman gives birth it's not too hard to figure out why. But I don't know about father-child incest.

Also, as far as reproduction goes, even between siblings it is often not a huge genetic problem as long as it only occurs for the one generation. The genetic problems people usually point to occur when there has been generation after generation of inbreeding, like with noble families. The risks are higher, obviously, but it's not like most people assume it to be.

By the way, I am a psychology (actually biopsychology) major, so I do have a reason to know this stuff!
 

Outright Villainy

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Jan 19, 2010
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Depends on how close. And while there's nothing technically wrong with siblings if no reproduction is involved, I'll still go "EWH!" for about 10 minutes any time I hear a story like that.
 

Riobux

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As long no kid is produced, it's consensual and if there's someone below 18 is involved, let there be no more than a two year gap between both consenting members, oh and they both have to be above 14. As long all that, go wild.
 

NeutralDrow

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Mar 23, 2009
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BGH122 said:
NeutralDrow said:
BGH122 said:
Eldarion said:
After all your brain is wired not to be attracted to siblings or offspring for very good reasons.
Is it? Where's the proof for this, where's the proof it's not behaviourally or cognitively learnt?
<url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westermarck_effect#Westermarck_effect>The Westermarck Effect. Technically, our brains appear to be wired both for and against being attracted to siblings. It's just that the "against" part isn't limited to siblings, and is usually stronger.
Imprinting doesn't prove biological cause of imprinting, just that the phenomonon exists. This'd be like you asking "Well what proves God exists?" and me pointing at lightning. Sure that could prove God exists, but it's not a reason to believe that this is the case.
For your analogy to work, you'd have to have scientific evidence of God, comparable to the cited studies.

Considering the imprinting in question doesn't have a cultural explanation (the societies in question don't have taboos against non-related children marrying, and yet they still rarely do), and your distinction between "behavioral" and "biological" strikes me as a false one, a biological explanation makes the most sense.
 

BGH122

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ImprovizoR said:
Morality depends on culture, society and their views. It's not a constant.
Let's dispel that myth right here. Hauser et al (2010), written up very nicely here [http://bps-research-digest.blogspot.com/2010/03/remote-rural-community-that-thinks.html], showed with global testing both online and, where internet doesn't exist (e.g. his rural Mayan sample), offline, showed that human morality is essentially unanimous in many issues with only small aberrations from culture to culture.

The old relativist view of morality, which was essentially tantamount to a get-out-of-jail-free card for moral reasoning, must now sod off since it's been shown that morality clearly depends upon a central core of shared biological or social impulse thus rendering 'moral realism' and 'moral argument' valid. If we all share morality at a core level then human moral truths can exist, whilst they wouldn't be valid to an alien or an animal there's little to say that any of our truths would.
 

Eldarion

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Helmutye said:
As far as the brain being wired to not be attracted to siblings or offspring, that is not as simple as you might think. There is a critical period during childhood development, during which you will develop that sort of aversion to sex with a sibling. However, there are cases where siblings have been separated early in life and thus have not developed that aversion. Usually what happens is that, if they do not have this early development aversion, they are INCREDIBLY attracted to each other because they have so many similarities in behavior and temperament. In other words, the "natural" aversion siblings have to each other comes about because of environment, not genetics. Sibling incest is by far the most common form, followed by father-child incest.
Ah I see, ok then I stand corrected. I thought it was genetically imprinted behavior. Not to say that I was implying that a pair of siblings having a relationship was wrong, I just assumed that that arose out of some kind of brain malfunction.
 

Mr.Mattress

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Jul 17, 2009
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While I find it morally questionable, and I myself can't even begin thinking of doing it, if you wanna do it and the other sibling wants to do it, then do it. Just don't expect a pretty life (unless others near you also partake in incest), especially from me (I don't think I can associate with Incestuous families).