Just mixing their sperm is not enough to create a child. The only way to create a fetus is to have a female gamete - i.e. egg - fertilised by a male gamete - i.e. sperm. So the two men could mix their sperm, but they would not know which had fertilised the egg, and would not know who the father would be.
Biologically, a child can only have one father.
However, other circumstances can lead to a child having more than one father figure in their life such as remarriage of their mother (stepfather) or adoption. By adoption, a child can acquire a new father who has all the legal rights of a biological father.
No, a child cannot have DNA from two biological fathers. Each person inherits half of their DNA from their mother and half from their father.
The DNA of the Y-chromosome is the DNA that is transmitted only from father to son. This is because women have two X-chromosomes, one of which is given to each child. But men have one X-chromosome and one Y-chromosome. So if a father gives a Y-chromosome to his child that child will be male, while only females receive the father's X-chromosome.
No, the father has to pay child support for both children. Of course the child that decides to live with him will be treated as he/she were when you were both married, but the child you have will still continue to receive child support by law!
Each man has two sons. There are six people total, each carrying one duck. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- incorrect. the answer is: the two men are a father and and his father, so that the grandfather came with his son and the father came with his son - the grandson. so the total is two men and the two sons - one son is also one of the men. meaning only 3 people came and each is holding 2 ducks. =]
Yes - a male child usually has two god-fathers and a god-mother - while a female child has two god-mothers and one god-father.
Then that DNA came from the father of the baby.
A child of two first cousins is the child of the parents and they are the child's mother and father. As the child of one first cousin, the child is also the first cousin, once removed, of the other parent. That, however, is of no importance. The closer relationship of parent and child is the one that really matters.
A birth father is a genetic father of a child, as opposed to an adoptive father or stepfather.
It's complicated, if a man was the presumed father - in other words if the man met all criteria of a father and was viewed as the child's father, then yes it would be possible for him to retain status of the legal father to the child and possibly have sole legal custody. If the child has two biological parents who have always been the acting / legal parents to the child, there would have to be extreme circumstances for the courts to terminate the parental rights to make the child eligible for adoption. If the man is wishing to adopt a child, yes single men are legally able to adopt.
Only in cases of illegitimate births. Well, the mother can take the child but she can't stop the child from seeing the father. the child deserves to see the father in their life. The father can also take the child back and the parents can share time with the child. Or the child can make his/her own decision to live with the mother or father.
Two men founded SPC, one was Jack Leslie Carey, my Grand Father :-)
If that is the only child you share, then you will have to pay him child support. If there are two children, then you two will break even and no one will pay child support. If there are more than two children, then the amount of support will have to be re-calculated and he should pay you less.