Мне кажется все дело в интерпретации. В общем я скорее всего тут самая "биологическая" по убеждениям, считаю что гены и физиология определяет поведение прежде всего. И когда я вижу как мой родившийся только что ребенок поджимает ступни точно как я - врожденное налицо. Или всю еду запивает водичкой как делала моя бабушка но не я. То есть научиться он не мог. Ну или вообще похож на папу И, хотя другие нет. В общем, вера закрывает глаза на очевидное. Я считаю что основное биология.
Вот, нашел...
In such a state and in the absence of anything to
eat or drink, most of us would probably opt for the needed substance
by the intragastric or intravenous route, to correct the discomfort and
pathology. This highlights the biological imperative underlying feeding
and drinking behaviour.
Sex doesn’t seem to be like this (A° gmo, 2007). Even in the extremes of
deprivation, there is not an obvious threatening disturbance outside the
brain that increases in magnitude over time. Neither does it appear that
desire increases with deprivation in the way that hunger and thirst do. A
few men who wish for celibacy or gender reorientation, or have troubling
deviant sexuality (Wassersug et al., 2004), opt for surgical castration.
However, such troubles all relate to psychological factors and the external
world rather than internal events. According to the argument to be
developed in the present book, where a failure to find a sexual outlet is
troubling, this arises in the context of desires that fail to be translated
into sexual behaviour. The trouble starts in the brain/mind, not elsewhere.
Any comparison with the bladder and urination makes the same point,
though even more strongly. Clearly the tension of a full bladder and the
desire for urination serve an intrinsic biological imperative: avoiding
involuntary urination or even bursting the bladder. Under medical treatment,
a catheter can solve the problem of excessive pressure.
Of course, there is an internal factor underlying sexual desire, which
tends to lower its sensitivity for a short period of time following orgasm.
It is equally clear that a signal from the genitals can contribute to desire.
However, it is the contention of this chapter that for sex no regulatory
factor comparable to energy, blood composition or bladder pressure exists.
Rather, the internal factor is best described in terms of the activity of
particular circuits of neurons within the brain that are responsive to
attractive others and are sensitized by sex hormones and signals from the
genitals. This brain system is desensitized by orgasm(s), an event intrinsic
to the brain.