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"law " "priest " "king "

Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 1001 The slave had much to learn.
25 1002 I smiled.
25 1003 Later, subject to such a regard, she would hope to be found pleasing.
25 1004 The humans of Gor are of course human, mostly the scions of Earthlings brought to this world long ago by the priest-kings, in Voyages of Acquisition.
25 1005 Although doubtless the priest-kings had on the whole been careful to select excellent specimens, intelligent and healthy, and so on, for introducing to Gor, the specimens were surely of typical Earth stock.
25 1006 In short the differences between the men of Earth and those of Gor were almost certain to be primarily cultural, and not physiological.
25 1007 There was no reason as far as I could tell that the men of Gor, if acculturated similarly to those of Earth, if subjected to the same debilitating indoctrinations, the same negativistic educations, the same unnatural engineerings, the same calculated underminings of manhood, the same inconsistent conditioning programs, which so confuse and cripple an organism, the same subversive emasculative politics, which encourages a male to dread, suspect, and fear his most natural impulses and urges, would not be much like the statistically subdued, inhibited, reduced, pathetic, tragic males of Earth, and, too, I supposed that the men of Earth, if raised in a natural culture, and acculturated in ways congenial to nature and not antithetical to her, might be as robust, as healthy and whole, as those of Gor, might be as strong-willed, as unified, as powerful, as happy and free as those of Gor, indeed, might be much as the men of Gor.
The slave had much to learn. I smiled. Later, subject to such a regard, she would hope to be found pleasing. The humans of Gor are of course human, mostly the scions of Earthlings brought to this world long ago by the priest-kings, in Voyages of Acquisition. Although doubtless the priest-kings had on the whole been careful to select excellent specimens, intelligent and healthy, and so on, for introducing to Gor, the specimens were surely of typical Earth stock. In short the differences between the men of Earth and those of Gor were almost certain to be primarily cultural, and not physiological. There was no reason as far as I could tell that the men of Gor, if acculturated similarly to those of Earth, if subjected to the same debilitating indoctrinations, the same negativistic educations, the same unnatural engineerings, the same calculated underminings of manhood, the same inconsistent conditioning programs, which so confuse and cripple an organism, the same subversive emasculative politics, which encourages a male to dread, suspect, and fear his most natural impulses and urges, would not be much like the statistically subdued, inhibited, reduced, pathetic, tragic males of Earth, and, too, I supposed that the men of Earth, if raised in a natural culture, and acculturated in ways congenial to nature and not antithetical to her, might be as robust, as healthy and whole, as those of Gor, might be as strong-willed, as unified, as powerful, as happy and free as those of Gor, indeed, might be much as the men of Gor. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter )