Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
848
It would be a vestige, like the rising of hair on "goose bumps".
It would be a vestige, like the rising of hair on "goose bumps".
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #848)
Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
845
Perhaps those who sought the darkness were not as easily found or succumbed to predators.
3
846
Perhaps, in time, as a matter of natural selections, operative upon a relatively, at that time, helpless species, those tended to survive whose mating impulses became synchronized with the moons.
3
847
This might explain why, even today, and doubtless numerous genetic codings later, codings obviously favoring frequent and aperiodic sexuality, some women are, so to speak, in addition, still "called by the moon".
3
848
It would be a vestige, like the rising of hair on "goose bumps".
3
849
Aside from this, it might be noted, of course, that the sexual cycles of various species do tend to be correlated with the cycles of the moon, presumably through one natural selection or another.
3
850
The Kurii, for example, seem to have retained some vestiges along these lines, for in that species, as I understand it, it is not unusual for females to go to the mating cliffs in the moonlight, where, helpless in their sexuality, they cry out, or howl, their needs.
3
851
I passed a few fellows playing dice.
Perhaps those who sought the darkness were not as easily found or succumbed to predators.
Perhaps, in time, as a matter of natural selections, operative upon a relatively, at that time, helpless species, those tended to survive whose mating impulses became synchronized with the moons.
This might explain why, even today, and doubtless numerous genetic codings later, codings obviously favoring frequent and aperiodic sexuality, some women are, so to speak, in addition, still "called by the moon".
It would be a vestige, like the rising of hair on "goose bumps".
Aside from this, it might be noted, of course, that the sexual cycles of various species do tend to be correlated with the cycles of the moon, presumably through one natural selection or another.
The Kurii, for example, seem to have retained some vestiges along these lines, for in that species, as I understand it, it is not unusual for females to go to the mating cliffs in the moonlight, where, helpless in their sexuality, they cry out, or howl, their needs.
I passed a few fellows playing dice.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 3)