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- Path: sparky!uunet!autodesk!owen
- From: owen@autodesk.com (D. Owen Rowley)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Subject: Re: Fundamentalists and the clitoris
- Message-ID: <17982@autodesk.COM>
- Date: 21 Nov 92 23:07:23 GMT
- References: <9NOV92.11344298@enh.nist.gov> <Bxv786.DAp@fig.citib.com> <1992Nov20.063447.5919@macc.wisc.edu>
- Sender: news@Autodesk.COM
- Lines: 170
-
-
- GAK.. I almost never even READ postings that start with a full screen of
- quoted text...
-
- Responding to responses of response kinda forces you to ahve to though.
- SO..
- I put these disclaimers in front to soothe my conscience.
-
- In article <1992Nov20.063447.5919@macc.wisc.edu>,
- anderson@macc.wisc.edu (Jess Anderson) writes:
-
- > >In article <Bxv786.DAp@fig.citib.com>, glp@fig.citib.com
- > >(Greg Parkinson) writes
- > >>I hate it when human sexuality gets compared to and defined
- > >>using lower animal behaviors. Human sexuality is a
- > >>complicated and subtle thing, and human sexual desires and
- > >>needs and expression cannot be explained simply in terms of
- > >>the "functional" penis and "non-functional" clitoris.
-
- > In article <17964@autodesk.COM> owen@autodesk.com (D. Owen
- > Rowley) writes:
- > >But sexuality has evolved from our animal ancestors like all
- > >of our other aspects.
-
- > Don't you think a *very* large "but" attends the word "like"
- > in that pronouncement? We have animal precursors that
- > copulate. But do they have sexuality? Do even the other
- > primates have sexuality?
-
- I'm having a hard time understanding your question.
- I think its best to not use the *Don't you think* strategy with me
- Jess, because it just doesn't seem to often be the case that
- you and I think similarly. Yes I know I used it on you, but I
- reserve the right to learn from my errors.
-
- If I've parsed your point correctly, I'd have to say, no.
- I tend to think that *other* animals do have sexuality, and I definiltly
- think other primates have very similar sexuality to us.
- Note, I said *other* animals, we *ARE* animals, well ... I am when
- properly stimulated :-)
-
- > Our sexuality may well have a broad basis in the
- > reproductive and other copulatory actions of the species
- > from which we arose, but I think it is far too sweeping a
- > statement to claim that either sexuality or all our other
- > aspects have evolved from earlier species.
-
- Well a bit more clearly put, but again, I disagree. I'd say that
- the broad basis commonality is lots broader than you indicate.
-
- > For one thing, it seems too deterministic.
-
- Well, we've banged heads on this one before Jess.
- Clearly I take a much more deterministic POV about the biological
- systems and the link to behavior than you do.
-
- > For another, it allows for no
- > spontaneous adaptations in our species to conditions that
- > simply do not exist for other species, largely as a result
- > of our cortical development.
-
- I don't buy this argument. I tend to think that when we see no
- allowance or possibilities based on our understanding of the
- broad spectrum of possibilities, it is our short sightedness and
- limitations that are the operative factor. Too often we find
- ourselves faced with discoveries we thought to be impossible.
-
- > >Clearly there is room for the wide view, wouldn't you agree?
-
- > But Owen, there's wide, wider and way too wide, especially
- > since there are so many features unique to human beings.
-
- Well , I didn't say there was only one wide view, and that I
- owned it? I would say that there are different observational
- aspects from each viewpoint. This points out a real difference in how
- each of us arrives at our respective opinions. I've noticed that
- I seem to be more comfortable with shifts in the dynamics of
- my thought process than most other people I meet. I find that
- most folks have a lower threshold of tolerance for chaos than I.
-
- I'm talking about Chaos in the sense of chaotic systems in the
- natural world. I can reccomend a program to help others achieve
- my level of understanding vis a vis this issue, but not publicly
- :-)
-
- > Moreover, I think your point is only tangentially relevant
- > to Greg's. It seemed to me he was talking about those
- > factors that have no real analog in our precursors, and
-
- No real analogue? Perhaps no real analogue that has been yet
- discovered?
-
- Have you looked into the stuff about the bonobos Jess?
- I find it dificult to believe that you could miss the
- significance of the recent discoverys regarding them?
-
- > whatever else one might speculate about the nature of our
- > sexuality, there's a signficant portion that is simply not
- > addressed by such concepts as "function" in our genital
- > parts.
-
- Oh really, what are they, I must be missing something?
-
- > >I find the social POV that sex organs are holy and that what
- > >you do with them or how you do it should be governed by
- > >religious dogma infinitly more disturbing than the POV that
- > >these organs and their function are determined by biological
- > >formulas.
-
- > Though the religious dogma view also disturbs me more than
- > the biological determinism view, both views seem close to
- > equal in the *immense* distance by which they fail to
- > account for the behaviors.
-
- Again, I do take a very deterministic POV regarding what I see
- as the chemical nature of consciousness and behavior.
- obviously this is a very big difference between our POV's.
-
- > >>There are so many basic differences (a big one being that
- > >>human females do not change appearance when they are in a
- > >>fertile period) that comparisons like this are specious.
- > >um, there are some very real changes in women that can be
- > >measured.
-
- > Um, he said changes in appearance. You're saying *those*
- > can be measured? Swelling of the breasts, maybe, fluid
- > retention? Is that what you mean?
-
- Yes those are observable cues, right?
- lets change *observable* to *detectable*, we tend to forget
- that sight is not our only sense, just the dominant one.
- Scent is another sense, and at the risk of incuring rath
- I maintain that scent cues and pheromones are a significant
- part of the sexual spectrum.
-
- > Temperature, hormonal
- > changes, and things like that are not apparent to the eye of
- > the beholder (though indeed they can be very apparent to the
- > woman during the fertility cycle).
-
- I'm trying not to be insensitive, but once again, there are
- scent clues to womens hormonal cycles. They may be vestigal
- but they may not.
-
- > >I think what you mean is that human reproduction is not
- > >intrinsicly tied to an estrus cycle, but that factor is not
- > >unique to our species.
- >
- > I miss the relevance here. What do you mean?
-
- Some animals have an estrus cycle which involves the entire reproductive
- system being tightly coupled, and timed to occur during seasons
- which result in the offspring having maximum survivability time
- in infancy.
- Becaus ethe human reproductive process is de-coupled from
- an estrus cycle, women ovulate all year round, and pregnancy is not
- bound to seasonal cycles.
-
- Humans are not the only animals so de-coupled
- Dolphins for example.
- I seem to remebre reading that dolphins also engage in
- non reproductive sex for pleasure too ?
-
- LUX ./. Dr. owen
-
- --
- D. Owen Rowley {uunet,fernwood,sun}!autodesk!owen
-
- " It will be a cold March 17th that I celebrate the imposition of
- Romes rule, on Pagan Ireland. Erin go ppphhhhhttttttt! "
-