Is sexual shame a social construct or an innate phenomenon? Have there been societies wherein coitus is as normalized as, say, handshaking?
>>18473393Maybe. Depends on how much you trust European travelers from the 17th to 19th centuries to relay accurate information.
>>18473406So zero.
>>18473393>Is sexual shame a social construct or an innate phenomenon? There are degrees, ultimately it seems to correlate with how much one is set to inherit. But this isn't always true, the gauls didn't much care who their father was if you weren't nobility and women would have many partners not knowing for certain who their offsprings father actually was . >Have there been societies wherein coitus is as normalized as, say, handshaking?Unlikely, many cultures had spousal sharing or even polyamory as standard practice, but to use sex as a greeting or normalize it to an equivalent extent? Seems like you'd have a lot of pregnant women to look after literally all the time.
>>18473414>ultimately it seems to correlate with how much one is set to inheritWhat does that mean?
>>18473418The more you gain economically and socially from who your parents are the less likely the male is to tolerate promiscuity.
>>18473411Have fun never posting here again because you think history is fake.Oh wait, only white people history of course.