You should've quit while you were less behind.
The study used the word nuclear family. It has a concrete definition that defines it as a man marrying a woman and having kids.
Wrong. False. Incorrectomundo. Definitions are
anything but "concrete." Meanings change all the time. I've already given the example of "google" but additional examples abound: "access" (noun used as a verb), "run" (verb used as a noun), "text" (noun used as a verb), etc, etc, etc....
Your error here is in thinking that definitions are decided once and for all and never change. This is a falsehood, and
precisely why studies make a point of stating their definitions
explicitly at the outset of their research.
You are using unambiguous as saying that the definition included gay couples. That is not the unambiguous definition of nuclear family.
It is unambiguous which definition the study used (they stated it directly) and that definition unambiguously includes homosexuals.
Ambiguity or more specially unambiguity is usually used in the argument of trying to determine the sole meaning of something that could have many different interpretations. Here we have the dictionary defined, social defined, and historical definition of nuclear family.
As I have said repeatedly,
ad nauseum, the
only definition that matters is the one the study itself explicitly defined.
You are trying to use a word you looked up, that is hardly ever used in everyday conversation as way to create some kind of fairy tale umbrella to put gay couples in a definition where they have never ever been included.
Please do not project your own ignorance of the meaning of "unambiguous" on to me. I am intimately familiar with its meaning, and I have used it very deliberately and correctly from the outset of this debate.
Further more you quote the clarity of the criteria in the study. For one gays didn't then and still aren't for the most part adoptive parents. Also the criteria specifically states married, but at the time this study was made, only one state allowed gay marriage. These are facts, not opinions.
They are irrelevant facts. Whether or not any homosexuals were subjects in the study does not change the fact that the definition would include them if they were selected.
So any data obtained or if any at all, study doesn't say, would be questionable as to the conclusion if kids in a gay married gay household would be well adjusted in comparison to a hetero home.
We're not debating the merits of the study's conclusions. We're debating whether or not it can be interpreted to say the things that Minney claimed it said, which it cannot.