Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
32
483
What is meant to be conveyed in the latter context is that according to a respected nature's decree, having to do with a thousand subtleties, principles, and genetic linkages, the male in our species is dominant, and powerfully so, not the female.
What is meant to be conveyed in the latter context is that according to a respected nature's decree, having to do with a thousand subtleties, principles, and genetic linkages, the male in our species is dominant, and powerfully so, not the female.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 32, Sentence #483)
Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
32
480
Too, does it not suggest youth, freshness, excitement, desirability, attractiveness, and, to some extent, beauty, helplessness, and vulnerability? In some other context, on the other hand, the deep, slave richness of the luscious expression 'woman' would seem more deliciously appropriate.
32
481
For example, consider the locution: "Woman is slave".
32
482
There, clearly, "Girl is slave" would not be correct.
32
483
What is meant to be conveyed in the latter context is that according to a respected nature's decree, having to do with a thousand subtleties, principles, and genetic linkages, the male in our species is dominant, and powerfully so, not the female.
32
484
Anything else is a perversion of nature, and results in unhappiness, misery, confusion, frustration, and, often, ill health, mental and physical, for both sexes.
32
485
Indeed, the denial of, and abuse of, nature can shorten lives.
32
486
It is interesting that considerable attention, upon Earth, should be directed toward relatively minor, but certainly serious and real, threats to human life, such as the inhalation of, or the ingestion of, certain substances, while the ill effects of a pervasive pathological conditioning program, which distorts, disfigures, twists, and stunts the natural relationship between the sexes are ignored.
Too, does it not suggest youth, freshness, excitement, desirability, attractiveness, and, to some extent, beauty, helplessness, and vulnerability? In some other context, on the other hand, the deep, slave richness of the luscious expression 'woman' would seem more deliciously appropriate.
For example, consider the locution: "Woman is slave".
There, clearly, "Girl is slave" would not be correct.
What is meant to be conveyed in the latter context is that according to a respected nature's decree, having to do with a thousand subtleties, principles, and genetic linkages, the male in our species is dominant, and powerfully so, not the female.
Anything else is a perversion of nature, and results in unhappiness, misery, confusion, frustration, and, often, ill health, mental and physical, for both sexes.
Indeed, the denial of, and abuse of, nature can shorten lives.
It is interesting that considerable attention, upon Earth, should be directed toward relatively minor, but certainly serious and real, threats to human life, such as the inhalation of, or the ingestion of, certain substances, while the ill effects of a pervasive pathological conditioning program, which distorts, disfigures, twists, and stunts the natural relationship between the sexes are ignored.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 32)