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Homosexuality, Religion, and Science: Moral Authority and the Persistence of Negative Attitudes†

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TLDR
In this article, the authors highlight the importance of perceived sources of epistemic and moral authority for understanding views of homosexuality, using stances on culturally controversial issues involving "science and religion" as indicators of where individuals place authority.
Abstract
The liberalization of attitudes toward homosexuality in the United States over the past 30 years is well documented. Despite these changes, substantial resistance to equality for gay men and lesbians remains. Previous studies indicate that beliefs about the etiology of homosexuality are central to this discussion. Those who believe homosexuality is innate are more favorable, while those who believe it is the result of a choice are more negative. Moreover, experimental research indicates that those with negative views actually become more opposed when a natural explanation is proposed. This study highlights the importance of perceived sources of epistemic and moral authority for understanding views of homosexuality. Using stances on culturally controversial issues involving “science and religion” as indicators of where individuals place authority, we outline the connection between perceptions of moral authority and attributions about homosexuality. Analyses of a national survey of American adults show that, net of controls, one’s stance on moral authority is the strongest predictor of attributions about whether homosexuality is chosen or innate.

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Multiracial Church Attendance and Support for Same‐Sex Romantic and Family Relationships

TL;DR: For example, this article examined the relationship between involvement in a racially diverse congregation and support for same-sex romantic and family relationships and found that increased exposure to racial diversity may promote a general tolerance toward non-traditional romantic couples and families.
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Politics, Religion, Attribution Theory, and Attitudes Toward Same‐Sex Unions

TL;DR: This paper examined the mediating influence and socially embedded nature of attribution beliefs at a time when attitudes toward same-sex unions are undergoing substantial changes in the American public. But they found that these opinions are socially embedded, especially within particular political and religious ideologies.
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Psychosocial Correlates of Religious Approaches to Same-Sex Attraction: A Mormon Perspective

TL;DR: The authors examined the psychosocial correlates of following various church-based approaches for dealing with same-sex attraction, based on a large sample (1,612) of samesex attracted current and former members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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Religion and Support for Adoption by Same-Sex Couples: The Relative Effects of Religious Tradition, Practices, and Beliefs

TL;DR: The authors examined the relative impact of religious factors on adoption by same-sex couples and found that religious factors are among the strongest predictors of opposition to same-same adoption, but that religious tradition has no significant effect on support for adoption once frequency of religious practice and beliefs about the Bible are held constant.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Conservative Protestantism and Attitudes toward Homosexuality: Does Political Orientation Mediate this Relationship?

TL;DR: This paper found that conservative Protestants are less accepting of homosexuality than non-affiliates, although a significant portion of this association is explained by political orientation, and concluded that political orientation is a mechanism that partially explains the association between conservative Protestants and attitudes toward homosexuality.
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Pulpits Versus Ivory Towers: Socializing Agents and Evolution Attitudes*

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework for predicting public opinion on human origins and the teaching of evolution in public schools is proposed, based on socialization and cognitive accessibility theories, and the analysis suggests that religion and education are key predictors of opinion, but that gender, partisanship and ideology also play an important role.
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Discourse, interaction, and testimony: The making of selves in the U.S. Protestant dispute over homosexuality

TL;DR: The authors examined interactions among Protestants as they discuss homosexuality in two sites, an ex-gay movement seminar and a pro-gay liberal congregation, and found that the genre of testimony produced an authentic-seeming truth, working performatively to produce group boundaries, to legitimate authority and hierarchies in the group, and to tacitly define certain categories as abject, unlivable.
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Fundamentalist Religious Affiliation and Support for Civil Liberties: A Critical Reexamination

TL;DR: This paper used the 2000 General Social Survey (GSS) data and logistic regression analysis to assess if fundamentalist religious affiliation independently of other religious or demographic characteristics correlates with low support for civil liberties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for homosexuality gene

Robert Pool
- 16 Jul 1993 - 
TL;DR: A genetic analysis of 40 pairs of homosexual brothers has uncovered a region on the X chromosome that appears to contain a gene or genes for homosexuality, but the chief researcher warns that this one site cannot explain all instances of homosexuality.
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