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Book 14. (1 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Individual Quote)

Even the physicians, however, normally do not admit their women to full practice until they have borne two children. - (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #16)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
16 16 Even the physicians, however, normally do not admit their women to full practice until they have borne two children.

Book 14. (7 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
16 13 Caste membership, for Goreans, is generally a simple matter of birth; it is not connected necessarily with the performance of certain skills, nor the attainment of a given level of proficiency in such skills.
16 14 To be sure, certain skills tend to be associated traditionally with certain castes, a fact which is clearly indicated in caste titles, such as the leather workers, the metal workers, the singers, and the peasants.
16 15 A notable exception to the generalization that women of a given caste normally do not engage in caste work is the caste of physicians, whose women are commonly trained, as are the boys, in the practice of medicine.
16 16 Even the physicians, however, normally do not admit their women to full practice until they have borne two children.
16 17 The purpose of this is to retain a high level of intelligence in the caste.
16 18 Professional women, it is well understood, tend not to reproduce themselves, a situation which, over time, would be likely to produce a diminution in the quality of the caste.
16 19 Concern for the future of the caste is thus evinced in this limitation by the physicians on the rights of their women to participate without delay in the caste craft.
Caste membership, for Goreans, is generally a simple matter of birth; it is not connected necessarily with the performance of certain skills, nor the attainment of a given level of proficiency in such skills. To be sure, certain skills tend to be associated traditionally with certain castes, a fact which is clearly indicated in caste titles, such as the leather workers, the metal workers, the singers, and the peasants. A notable exception to the generalization that women of a given caste normally do not engage in caste work is the caste of physicians, whose women are commonly trained, as are the boys, in the practice of medicine. Even the physicians, however, normally do not admit their women to full practice until they have borne two children. The purpose of this is to retain a high level of intelligence in the caste. Professional women, it is well understood, tend not to reproduce themselves, a situation which, over time, would be likely to produce a diminution in the quality of the caste. Concern for the future of the caste is thus evinced in this limitation by the physicians on the rights of their women to participate without delay in the caste craft. - (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 16)