Naturally Selective: Evolution, Orgasm, and Female Choice by Robert King
Researchers of human behaviour have identified an "orgasm gap": Men usually orgasm during intercourse, whereas women often do not. This book addresses this mystery. The two leading explanations are either that women are psychologically broken - Freuds theory or badly designed the by-product theory. However, there is a much more compelling third explanation. Evolutionary biology, anatomy, physiology, and direct sex research suggest women have evolved under their own selection pressures and orgasm is a fitness-increasing consequence of such selective factors. This is revealed in their patterns of orgasmic response, which are neither random nor inexplicable.
Key Features
- Synthesizes decades of peer-reviewed sex research in anatomy, biology, physiology, and behavior
- Engagingly written based on feedback from students, peers, and interested lay persons
- Makes sense of the orgasm gap between men and women
- Provides a wider context of human sexual dimorphism and mutual sexual selection
- Balances sex research and real-world research and practical applications.