Making Sense Of Sex: How Genes And Gender Influence Our Relationships (Reupload)

ISBN: 1559634529

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Making Sense Of Sex: How Genes And Gender Influence Our Relationships
Publisher: Island Press | ISBN: 1559634529 | edition 1997 | PDF | 256 pages | 37,9 mb

Why do most women prefer romance, and men, sex? Why do women live longer than men? Why are men willing to pay for sex while women almost never are? Why are women nearly always the primary caregivers of young children? What happens when a man's brain is trapped in a woman's body? When is a short, balding middle-aged man more attractive than a tall, handsome, young one? In Making Sense of Sex, the husband and wife team of David Barash, an evolutionary biologist, and Judith Lipton, a clinical psychiatrist, draw on their respective areas of expertise to explore and explain the central fact of our existence-that men and women are fundamentally, unalterably different. They present an eye-opening and wide-ranging consideration of what those differences are, how they came to be, why they are important, and what they mean in our everyday lives.The authors integrate biological and anthropological findings with real-life stories of indviduals to address the conundrums that surround male-female behavior and relationships. Drawing on the latest research in evolutionary biology, they trace the multifaceted gender gap to the basic, defining difference between males and females: that one makes sperm, the other, eggs. They show how that distinction explains why women and men differ in essential ways, exploring such questions as: Why are men more attracted than women to pornography, group sex, and one-night stands? Why are women the "gatekeepers" of sex? Why do women have orgasms.Making Sense of Sex is a highly informative and entertaining look at human relationships. The book will help readers not only to better understand themselves, but to better understand their children, their relatives, and their lovers with whom they share so much yet find so infuriatingly and fascinatingly different.Summary: No room for the childfree....Rating: 3Although I was familiar with much of what Barash and Lipton said, I kept reading in order to find out where people like me fit in -- those of us who have no children by choice on a planet that's already dangerously overcrowded, polluted and has more and more problems every day. The authors never even touched on my demographic, which has existed through history. Overall I didn't find the book helpful, and I thought their conclusions were breezily simplistic, and I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone who wants to begin reading on ethology. There are more well-thought-out books that have better research and fewer stereotypes of men and women than this one.Summary: Interesting presentation but not a good explanationRating: 3Though well written and at times entertaining, the authors of this book seem to imply that the behavior of such diverse species as insects, bluebirds,and elephant seals are clues to human males with primate antecedents. Evolutionary psychology is more an interpretation of scientific evidence than a scientific field -- hence more art than science and therefore littered with more assumption, opinion and analogy than concrete, measurable results. What is most disappointing in the field, as found in this book, is the conclusion that males of all species bear universal and compulsive characteristics towards violence, aggression, dominance, promiscuity, and a desperate need to reproduce. Women are complimentary -- being passive, fearful, timid, and willingly reproductive. Rape is mentioned in a reproductive sense, more so than as an act of violence that is non-sexual but personally abusive or as the result of a society that devalues women. The authors (and it is apparent that David Barash, the evolutionary biologist, has the stronger voice in this book) nearly dismiss social influences despite data in psychology, psychiatry, and neuroscience that is demonstrating that early childhood experiences, particularly trauma, are instrumental in forming the neuro-network and thus the behaviors of an individual. They also dismiss social restrictions that historically provided men and women with their adult roles (whether or not men and women actually liked these roles).Differences in sexual expression, and additional social or anti-social behaviors, may be influenced by hormones, genes, etc. They may also be influenced by instinctive behaviors, although I find it difficult to compare a man to a bluebird, or even to a primate, since we are many millions of years away from the jungle. I find it difficult also to reconcile the good-humored, non-violent, sexually responsible, constructive and intelligent men I know to this picture of a hormonally and instinctually driven individual prone to aggression and masculine displays.The book is nicely written. It is technical but easily understood. Portions attempt to explain concerns like why men are not as nurturing as women (although the explanation is not successful), why domestic violence is almost solely perpetrated by a male, and why women are more discriminating about their sex partners. Some due is given to feminist theories, although I wish there was equal time for male objections to evolutionary psychology. Additional credence to the methods we use to raise young men and our traditional expectation for male behavior should also be more thoroughly represented. Is the book worth reading? As a source for ideas in evolutionary psychology, it is above average. The authors' knowledge of and commitment to their field(s)is worthy of respect. The writing and organization is excellent. But as an explanation for the differences in the sexes and for different mating behaviors, I think we are better off making our own unlearned observations.

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