Profs & Pints Online: Sex, Misogyny and Evolution

Profs and Pints

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Aug

18

11:00pm

Profs & Pints Online: Sex, Misogyny and Evolution

By Profs and Pints

Profs and Pints Online presents: “Sex, Misogyny and Evolution” with Rui Diogo, associate professor of anatomy at Howard University's College of Medicine and resource faculty member at George Washington University's Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology.
For far too long, scholarly research on love, marriage, sex, and sexual conflict was based on the researchers’ personal prejudices or on pseudo-scientific ideas divorced from scientific observation. Today, fortunately, we are in the process of gaining a more objective understanding of how these things have evolved throughout human history. Researchers from fields such as psychology, neurobiology, anthropology and evolutionary biology are using archaeological research into extinct human groups, studies of primates and other animals, and comparative studies of various subgroups of modern humans to gain a much better understanding of relations between the sexes.
In an updated version of a talk he has delivered on stage, Professor Rui Diogo will offer a fascinating summary of the findings of such research. He’ll take up longstanding questions related to nature versus nurture and clear up confusion rooted in racism, sexism, misogyny, and other prejudices. He’ll discuss how culture might lead to differences in ability to reach orgasm, and how sexuality was since long an obsession of organized religions and continues to be a cultural taboo. Young children see adults close their doors to “do it,” as if it is a horrible, forbidden act, and the empirical evidence shows that parents’ promotion of such thinking has negative implications throughout life.
Professor Diogo also will describe how various social changes, such as the rise of capitalism, have influenced human sexuality, and in particular had allowed love to conquer marriage, for the better or the worse. He’ll also show how homosexuality occurs naturally in other species, not being unique to humans or anything “unnatural,” and how monogamy may be mainly a social construct mainly related to humanity’s shift from hunting and gathering to a more sedentary lifestyle with the rise of the first cities.
Your ancestors up in the trees missed out on such learning opportunities. (Ticket: $12. A recorded version of this talk will remain available at the link given here. Talk attendees should be at least 18 years old due to the mature nature of the subject matter.)

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