My
favorite developmental neuropsychologist, Dr. James Prescott (former
Health Scientist Administrator of the Developmental Behavioral Biology
Program, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development),
has just finished a new article, Prevention
or Therapy and The Politics of Trust: Inspiring a New Human Agenda,
published in Psychotherapy
and Politics. It is a very important paper that examines the
relationship between violence and mother-infant bonding, sexuality
and religion.

Dr
Susan Block... bonobo love,
bonding and human sexuality. |
|
My first
encounter with Dr. Prescott's work occurred when someone who heard
me give a talk on Ethical
Hedonism sent me an extraordinary article published in "The
Bulletin of The Atomic Scientists" way back in the old hippie-swinger
days of November 1975. I wasn't sent this article until 1992,
and even though it was almost 20 years later, it blew me away
with its timeliness. It was called Body
Pleasure and the Origins of Violence. Its basic underlying
theory was something that I already knew in my bones: pleasure
fosters peace. Put in Prescott's terms of somatosensory pleasure
deprivation: "Our brains have a built-in reciprocal relationship
between pleasure and violence. When the pleasure systems of the
brain are activated, they inhibit the neural systems that mediate
violence."
Its
basic underlying theory was
something that I already knew in
my bones: pleasure fosters peace.
Using considerable,
in-depth research on non-human primate as well as formal, systematic
studies of 49 different non-industrialized human cultures (ie.,
the Zuni Indians and Trobriand Islanders) and more informal analyses
of modern cultures, Prescott clearly and convincingly demonstrates
how the deprivation of physical sensory pleasure - especially
in the early stages of life - is a root cause of physical violence.
Prescott's theories, along with the bonobo
chimpanzees, my own bonobo-style
marriage and other bonobo
friends and lovers, inspired me write The
10 Commandments of Pleasure where I quote Dr. Prescott's work.
 |
|
Now it's
over 30 years after that seminal article was published, but most
of what Prescott wrote back in 1975 could easily have been written
now. As he concluded then, "the data clearly indicates that
punitive-repressive attitudes toward extramarital sex are also
linked with physical violence, personal crime, and the practice
of slavery... Available data clearly indicates that the rigid
values of monogamy, chastity, and virginity help produce physical
violence... Societies which value monogamy emphasize military
glory and worship aggressive gods." These conclusions can't
help but bring to mind modern American society which greatly values
monogamy, a cornerstone of "Family Values." And here
we are, up to our monogamous necks in military aggression! How
does the one seem to lead to the other? Prescott's new piece on
"The
Politics of Trust" fleshes out his theories with more data,
including the Canela tribe of South America, and with recent research
on bonobos.
"Available
data clearly indicates that the
rigid values of monogamy, chastity, and
virginity help produce physical violence...
Societies which value monogamy
emphasize military glory and
worship aggressive gods."
- Dr. James Prescott
(former Health Scientist Administrator of the Developmental Behavioral
Biology Program, National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development)
As Prescott
wrote me personally, accompanying his announcement of the new
article's publication, he feels it "will not be well received
as it lays accountability for the pathological violence of homo
sapiens to the monotheistic religions, sexual puritanism and failure
to form the foundation in brain structure and function for affectional
bonding behaviors."
Unfortunately,
he's probably right. There's plenty of interest and tax money
for conducting specious research on whether pornography causes
violence (and they never do find that it does, no matter how hard
they try). But there's barely an open ear to how monotheism and
monogamy, coupled with lack of sufficient physical maternal-infant
bonding and pleasure deprivation in childhood and adolescence,
might play a part in making our culture as violent and militaristic
as it is today.

|
Dr.
Susan Block is a sex educator, cultural commentator, host
of The Dr. Susan Block Show and author of The 10 Commandments
of Pleasure. Visit her website at http://www.drsusanblock.com
Send all comments, love letters, hate mail, questions, confessions,
endorsements, enticements and testimonials to her at liberties@blockbooks.com.
Read other articles by Dr Susan Block (click on the balls)
Our Night Of Weimar Love
Blue Values
Family Values Means Family First And Screw The Community
It Always Rains In California: All About Female Ejaculation
Springtime For Sex And God
The bigO Can Be Yours
Bush's P.O.W. Porn |