By
HENRY STANTON
SOCIAL CULTURE PUBLICATIONS
151 FIFTH AVENUE· NEW YORK
Copyright, 1922
Social Culture Publications
MANUFACTURED IN U. S. A.
PAGE | ||
I. | Sex | 5 |
II. | The Transition from Cell to Human Being | 12 |
III. | Sex in Male Childhood | 20 |
IV. | Sex in Female Childhood | 26 |
V. | Sex in the Adolescent Male | 30 |
VI. | Sex in the Adolescent Female | 35 |
VII. | Sex in the Marriage Relation (The Husband) | 43 |
VIII. | Sex in the Marriage Relation (The Wife) | 45 |
IX. | Sex Diseases | 53 |
X. | Love and Sex | 57[4] |
The happiness of all human beings, men andwomen, depends largely on their rational solutionof the sexual problem. Sex and the part itplays in human life cannot be ignored. In the caseof animals sex plays a simpler and less complexrôle. It is a purely natural and instinctive functionwhose underlying purpose is the perpetuation ofthe species. It is not complicated by the many incidentalphenomena which result, in man's case, frompsychologic, economic, moral and religious causes.Climate, social conditions, individual modes of lifeand work, alcohol, wealth and poverty, and otherfactors affect sexual activity in human beings.
Sexual love, which is practically unknown to theanimals, is a special development of the sex urgein the human soul. The deeper purpose of the sexf