
audiobook
by Melvin M. (Melvin Moses) Knight, Phyllis Blanchard, Iva Lowther Peters
PREFACE
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
In recent decades biology has upended many long‑standing ideas about sex and the family, and this work brings those scientific breakthroughs together with the cultural and psychological lenses through which societies have always viewed sexuality. The authors begin by laying out the hard‑won data from genetics, anatomy and laboratory research, showing how earlier sociological models—once treated as almost doctrinal—fall short when measured against modern evidence. By tracing the evolution of sex from the simplest organisms to humans, the book sets the stage for a fresh, evidence‑based conversation about what sex really is.
The study is divided into three sections, each written by a specialist in biology, ethnology or psychology. First comes a clear explanation of the biological foundations of reproduction; next follows an exploration of the myriad ideas cultures have fashioned to accommodate those facts; finally, the psychological consequences of centuries of social experiment are examined. Together they offer listeners a comprehensive, interdisciplinary portrait of how our deepest biological drives intersect with the rules and beliefs that shape family life today.
Full title
Taboo and genetics : A study of the biological, sociological and psychological foundation of the family A Study of the Biological, Sociological and Psychological Foundation of the Family
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (327K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-12-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1887–1981
A longtime University of California, Berkeley scholar, he wrote widely on economic history and on the Caribbean, including a noted study of the U.S. occupation of the Dominican Republic. He was also one of three Knight brothers who became economists, alongside the better-known Frank H. Knight.
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1895–1986
A pioneering clinical psychologist, she wrote clearly and sympathetically about adolescence, mental hygiene, and the ways children develop within family and society. Her books bring early twentieth-century psychology to life through practical concerns that still feel familiar.
View all books1876–1961
A scholar of social customs and women’s lives, this early 20th-century writer explored subjects that many people of her era treated as off-limits. Her surviving works connect psychology, sociology, education, and women’s employment in a way that still feels curious and wide-ranging.
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