Nothing happens in a vacuum and you can't just ignore social, religious, and economic factors. If you're a gay English farmer in the 1200s you're hardly going to meet a nice guy, settle down, and open a hair salon.* You're going to hide your sexuality so as not to be executed for it, and you're going to get married and have a passel of kids because you need the manpower to keep the farm going. That same individual would likely have behaved very differently if he'd had the freedom to be himself without the guaranteed loss of his freedom, property, life, and eternal soul.PaulSacramento wrote:ED, you and it seems the author of the report, are confusing Bisexuality ( which the happens in nature and was practiced by the Spartans as a way to Forster mentor-ship and warrior camaraderie) with homosexuality which is EXCLUSIVE sexual relations between people of the same gender and CAN NOT lead to procreation via natural means.
Spartan warriors were expected to do their part to make more Spartans. A gay Spartan wouldn't have had any interest in a physical relationship with a woman, but marriage and procreation were matters of state security. He wouldn't have been into it, but he'd have done what needed doing with dutiful stoicism. We're talking about Spartans here. You could expect Spartans to do the expected. Their entire society was basically a dam holding back a flood of angry Helots, and they all knew what would happen if it started to crack.
* Yes, I know that I'm stereotyping, but the fact remains.