What is feminism?
There are many different definitions of feminism. Do they hold anything in common?
There are many different definitions of feminism. Do they hold anything in common?
Publishing here for the first time on the internet, Lester Ward’s 1888 essay about the superiority of women is bound to cause some facepalming.
In part-3 of the series Dr, Tallis looks at the difference between Oriental and Western approaches to forming relationships – between arranged coupling and romantic love.
We continue Dr. Frank Tallis’s survey of romantic love with Part-2 – which looks into the origin and evolution of men placing women on pedestals
Dr. Frank Tallis has written a book on the sickness that is romantic love. We bring you part one of a three-part excerpt from the book.
Is feminism a religion? The terms feminists use have parallels in Christianity, but August Løvenskiolds examines the evidence so you can decide.
If you’re going to focus on men’s crotch area, how about you consider circumcision rather than “manspreading”?
“Civility is particularly due to all women; and, remember, that no provocation whatsoever can justify any man in not being civil to every woman; and the greatest man would justly be reckoned a brute if he were not civil to the meanest woman. It is due to their sex..” Written a century and a half ago, is this reasoning much different today?
I think it is safe to say that for 99.999999…% of men, their sex lives do not come anywhere close to their sexual fantasies. In all of human history, one of the few exceptions might be the late Roger Vadim. Vadim was a French filmmaker whose career peaked during the jet set/beautiful people/swinging 60s era. …
Someone we’ve long been a fan of, Christina Hoff-Sommers, has an answer to a question she gets a lot.