To me it seemed like the article was less about nature vs nurture and more about the author's resentment that men aren't held as accountable for their children's health as mothers are:
From the article,
Older mothers no longer need to shoulder all the blame: “It’s the aging man who damages the offspring."... The well-being of the children used to be the sole responsibility of their mothers. Now fathers have to be held accountable, too. Having twice endured the self-scrutiny and second-guessing that goes along with being pregnant, I wish them luck.
The author really seems to buy into the concept of a blame culture doesn't she. People don't seem to realise that there is a chance of 'bad' stuff happening and if they want the good stuff they need to take a risk. You might be able to minimise some risks but if you obsess over them you're going to go down the path of seeing only danger everywhere.
Of course this blame culture develops and spreads through social networks where people talk behind the back of someone who doesn't have a perfect child and blames their genetics or parenting skills or lifestyle choices.
The blame culture is a terrible problem. If nobody is responsible for anything because it's not their fault, and somebody else is to blame, how are people going to become self-reliant?
I'm assuming your question is genuine rather than rhetorical.
If a person believes that their personal outcomes are largely or totally created by circumstances out of their control, they will have difficulties becoming self-reliant. Blaming other people and other things for personal failings and problems seldom leads to better outcomes.
The difference is that any Lamarckian epigenetic influence would still be passed on at conception, and is at any rate set throughout the father's entire lifetime. There's no actual period of time, like pregnancy, that presents itself as a particular opportunity for criticism.
Both sexes' lives before conception and pregnancy matter - in both cases, cumulative damage to reproductive cells is more likely the older they are. (Women in addition have pregnancy, during which there can be big affects on the embryo, for example if she binge-drinks.)
The point of the article was that we knew little of the non-pregnancy effects before recent years. And while that information applies to both sexes, it is socially more significant for men, who previously were not considered relevant in this matter, but now are.
Higher ages of conceiving babies in both sexes may be contributing to a rise in autism and so forth. But what is novel is that we already knew that was true for women, now the data shows it is true for men as well.
From what is this based on? It is not congruent with literature I have read on the matter. For one, gametes from the aged father are vastly more likely to incorporate denovo (typically deleterious) mutations.
PLoS Medicine: Contrasting Effects of Maternal and Paternal Age on Offspring Intelligence
Evidence is accumulating that advanced paternal age may exhibit a wider range of effects on the health and development of the offspring than increased maternal age (which is largely confined to risk for Down syndrome). Advanced paternal age is a risk factor for childhood conditions such as cleft lip and palate; childhood cancers and congenital heart defects [1]; and neuropsychiatric conditions such as autism [4], schizophrenia [5,6], epilepsy [7], and bipolar disorder [8]. Advanced paternal age also appears to affect mortality, and an intriguing analysis of family history data from European nobility found that older age of fatherhood (greater than 45 years) is associated with a reduction of about two years in the life span of daughters [9].
This is based primarily on the fact that the risk of Down's Syndrome and pregnancy complications is easily observable, whereas the risk of various other things associated to paternal age are harder to see.
For the most part, the bigger the risk, the easier it is to observe.
However, if you have hard numbers (rather than a piece that is mainly speculative), I'd love to see them.
Understand that I did not post that question for reasons of vanity. I really wanted to know what led you to that belief (I have not found much evidence supporting it) and am still interested in knowing, in order that I might update my beliefs if necessary.
I at least cited something. I picked up the article I had read most recently. Speculative or not, it was published in a peer reviewed journal by those active in the area. I urge you to do your own research and come to your own conclusion. As these things are not known one can only give hypotheses on their causes. Statistics which are often not done well in the medical field are not necessarily stronger than reasoning from first principles.
If you have access to any geneticist, autism researchers or biologist do ask them. And consider. De novo mutations are culprit for many rare diseases including those like autism (each particular case often to rare causes) with non-specific causes. In terms of the gametes which both parents provide, sperm cells unlike ova, have a vastly larger number of these errors with probability increasing with time. This is a stronger argument than something is hard to observe and does not assume that the researchers did not think of something fairly quite obvious. The reason for Down Syndrome and maternal age also has a solid biological hypothesis that is almost inverse (not new mutations but chromosomal damage, usually catastrophic -> miscarrying).
I was actually interested in what made you come to hold this belief because it is not in line with much of what I have picked up in the literature. If you can give a solid counter reference, speculative or not I would be interested. A cursory search on my part did not find anything supporting your claim.
First of all, I think my glib one-line response carried a lot more certainty than I should have expressed. My bad.
The main reason I believe maternal age is a bigger issue is because of the absence of evidence about paternal age. It's pretty well established epidemiologically that maternal age is a problem, but there is far less evidence about paternal age. That suggests that whatever problems paternal age causes, they are harder to observe. The most common reason an effect is hard to observe is because it is small.
That's the extent of it. It's more or less the same reason I take the media's latest "new study suggests XXX might cause cancer" stories with a grain of salt.
I haven't looked into this deeply at all. If you have lots of info on it, you should probably not update your beliefs.
I took that undercurrent as slightly more firm than tongue in cheek. The overall description of the science and its implications were interesting enough to make the article worthwhile.
Everyone has a bias, and a popular article is going to let that show through more than a scientific paper, to make it interesting.
You may as well complain that comics are funny when they observe the human condition.
From the article,
Older mothers no longer need to shoulder all the blame: “It’s the aging man who damages the offspring."... The well-being of the children used to be the sole responsibility of their mothers. Now fathers have to be held accountable, too. Having twice endured the self-scrutiny and second-guessing that goes along with being pregnant, I wish them luck.