The Biology, Physiology and Sociology of Reproduction by Winfield Scott Hall (novels to read in english TXT) 📖
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12. Is there any way to regulate intercourse so as to control the sex of the offspring?
While there are many theories upon this subject no one of them is generally accepted by medical men.
13. Will an intense and continuous desire on the part of a young man for sexual intercourse cause a loss of seminal fluid?
An intense and continuous desire for sexual intercourse will, without question, cause an active secretion on the part of the testes, an increased secretion on the part of the seminal vesicles and an active secretion on the part of the prostate gland and of Cowper's glands. The secretion from Cowper's glands will make its way along the urethra and appear at the opening of that duct, probably soiling the linen of the subject. The accumulated semen from the other glands will tend rather to aggravate than allay the sexual desires. Such a condition of the sexual apparatus is likely to cause a nocturnal emission, relieving this tension and emptying the gorged gland ducts. If the nocturnal emission does not occur, the sexual desires are certain to return to occupy the waking hours more or less completely. If the nocturnal emission does occur, it will carry away not alone the vesicular secretion, but also more or less of the nascent spermatozoa and other constituents of the vital fluid. Seasons of intense and prolonged sexual excitement are in a high degree inimical to continence, and even though the subject does not fully submit to his inclination, his nocturnal emissions, which are likely to come frequently, carry away the product of the testicular secretion, thereby depleting to a certain extent, his virility. It is hardly necessary to urge the importance of resisting these onslaughts of sexual passion in their very incipiency.
14. How may the habit of masturbation best be brought under control?
The first thing to accomplish is the purification of the thoughts. The most effective way to purify the thoughts is to divert them to a pure and strictly non-sexual subject—e.g., pure mathematics. The young man who is trying to break this habit will do well to follow very closely the rather strenuous regime outlined under hygiene in the body of the book. If his condition is complicated because of the presence of a very long loose foreskin, he will be wise to have this removed by the simple operation of circumcision. If he should awake in the night and feel the temptation to resort to his old habit, he should resist the temptation in its first stage and instantly put his mind on some subject quite foreign to his sexual apparatus. If he does not succeed by force of will in diverting his mind from himself, the best thing to do is to arise, dress and walk. If walking will not do it let him run, and keep moving in the open air, under God's blue sky until he is so tired he can hardly put one foot before the other. Then if he will retire to his room, he will probably have no further difficulty at that time.
15. What influence has dancing upon the young man's solution of his sexual problems?
It hardly seems possible that a virile, husky young man, in his early twenties, could be subjected for several hours to the conditions of the modern dance hall, where he is brought into very close physical contact with young women, dressed to expose their secondary sexual features, perfumed to excite in a man his hereditary sexual instincts; held so close to his partner in the round dance that he is conscious of every movement of her limbs, and all of these under the influence of artificial light and music—I say, it is hardly possible for a virile young man to be subjected to all these conditions without experiencing an extreme sexual excitement. That such an experience often repeated not only does not simplify the young man's problem, but seriously complicates it is not a matter of doubt on the part of anyone who has studied these problems. All specialists in this field, without a single exception, concur in the belief that the dance is a device of the devil so far as the young man is concerned. That the young women are, for the most part, quite innocent of the effect of all these conditions upon their young men friends is also believed by those who have studied the problem. If they were conscious of it, a large majority of them would not longer consent to be the party to such unfortunate conditions. The Square Dance, the Virginia Reel and similar dances of the times of our grandparents are not remotely to be compared in this matter with the modern Round Dance.
16. May lost Virility be regained by use of "Remedies" or medicines of any kind?
No. Positively and absolutely, No. Many such nostrums are advertised in the public prints. Many are sold by charlatans and quacks. No reputable physician would hold out to his patient the hope that any drug could bring back lost manhood.
Lost manhood or lost virility may be regained by right living only. The prescription for right living is as follows: Live a continent life and follow a strenuous and sane regime of personal hygiene, such as outlined in chapter V above.
17. Is the production of semen modified by nutrition?
The production of semen is greatly modified by the state of nutrition. Remember in this connection that semen is partly from the testes (Spermatozoa) and partly from the vesicles and prostate. The formation and release of spermatozoa is only slightly modified by the condition of nutrition; while the rate of secretion from the vesicles is greatly modified in quantity. This accounts for the fact that well nourished men who eat heavily are very likely to experience frequent nocturnal emissions, when living continently.
Heard by 20,000 men last year.
WHAT IS SAID ABOUT IT.
The Young Men's Christian Association of Philadelphia.
Walter M. Wood, General Secretary
October 17, 1908.
To Whom it May Concern:
It is with great pleasure that I pay a tribute of appreciation to the excellent service of Dr. Winfield S. Hall, in his presentation to audiences of young men of the vital problems of sexual hygiene.
With the intelligence of a trained and experienced physician, with the thoroughness and frankness of an expert teacher and with the delicacy and motive of a Christian gentleman, he presents the "Young Man's Problem" in such a way as to make him, in my judgment, one of the most helpful counselors of young men on the American platform today.
Sincerely,
W.M. WOOD.
University of Notre Dame.
Winfield Scott Hall, M.D.,
Northwestern University Medical School.
My Dear Dr. Hall:
In your lecture on "The Young Man's Problem" and in your book on "Sexual Hygiene" you are doing a great service for the rising generation. I am convinced that one great source of vice is ignorance about the matters touched upon in your lecture and book. Priests are constantly giving instruction on these same points, but it is a distinct advantage to have their teaching reinforced by a distinguished physician, expressing himself with the plainness of the laity and speaking always in a most reverential spirit. For students seventeen years of age or more your presentation of this difficult subject will be a God-send, for it abates curiosity, dissipates ignorance, warns of perils and arouses a manly desire for a clean life.
Very sincerely yours,
JOHN CAVANAUGH, C.S.C.,
President.
Central Department, Young Men's Christian Association, Chicago.
October 21, 1908.
Dr. Winfield S. Hall, Northwestern University Medical School.
My Dear Dr. Hall:
Our committee wants to know if we cannot arrange a date with you this year to deliver your lecture on "The Young Man's Problem." I also want some more of your books on Reproduction and Sexual Hygiene.
I cannot forbear to express my very hearty appreciation of the splendid service you have done and are doing to the young manhood of our country in this lecture and this book. I have never heard a presentation of the subject which takes hold so deeply upon thoughtful men, and your book is by all odds the best thing in print on this subject. Your scientific, yet popular method and the absence of vague moralizing are convincing and inspiring in their effects. I trust we may hear you this year.
Very truly yours,
HERBERT W. GATES,
Secy., Religious Work.
Given to many audiences of boys in High-School, Academy, Y.M.C.A. and Summer Camp.
The Institute and Training School of Young Men's Christian Associations, Chicago and Lake Geneva.
October 7, 1908.
Dr. Winfield S. Hall, Northwestern Medical School, Chicago, Ill.
My Dear Dr. Hall:
I want to express my appreciation of your talk to boys on Sexual Hygiene. I listened with the greatest of interest to your presentation before the Boys' Conference at Lake Geneva the past summer and it seemed to me that both in substance and in form of presentation you hit the nail on the head in a way I had never before seen it done. I believe that your contribution to boys in this direction is to be even greater than that which you have been making to young men.
Sincerely yours,
FRANK H. BURT,
President.
State Agricultural College of Colorado.
Dr. Winfield S. Hall,
Fort Collins, Colo., October 27, 1908.
Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago.
Dear Doctor:
I wish to testify to the value of your lecture to boys from 12 to 16 years of age. You have touched a vital subject in a most original way that impresses every boy that hears you. You lead up to your "Secret of Manhood" in a manner that holds the attention, impresses the truth you want to teach, so that it is sure to be of lasting good.
This lecture I regard as the very best of its kind, which I have ever heard.
Sincerely yours,
W.H. OLIN.
Vice Dean, State Agricultural College of Colorado.
Princeton Township High School.
Princeton, Ill., October 6, 1908.
Dr. Winfield S. Hall of the Northwestern University Medical School recently gave a talk to our high school boys along physiological lines, setting forth very scientifically but plainly many delicate and important truths which every boy should know. Dr. Hall is a master of his subject and his manner is so dignified and yet sympathetic that he commands respect and holds the closest attention. I feel sure that such a talk given to boys and young men does a great amount of good.
Sincerely,
H.S. MAGILL, JR.,
Principal.
International Committee, Young Men's Christian Association.
Chicago, Ill., October 4, 1908.
W.S. Hall, M.D., Chicago, Ill.
My dear Doctor:
I am more than glad to speak a word in commendation of your lecture to boys on the "Secret of Manhood." To me it is the most sane, safe and logical presentation of a much avoided subject that I have ever heard. The boys at the Lake Geneva Conference were strongly impressed without the undue excitement and morbid curiosity that so often accompany the presentation of the subject of "Personal Purity." And not only were the boys benefited, but all the fifty boy workers present, representing the entire Central West, had nothing but words of highest praise for the way you handled the subject before two hundred older boys.
I am glad that you are getting out material for a booklet on the "Secret of Manhood," and shall be pleased to see the manuscript. We are much in need of such a thing and believe the International Committee can aid you in getting it out if necessary. Yours cordially,
F.A. CROSBY,
Boys' Work Secy., International Committee. Y.M.C.A.
Typographical errors corrected in text:
Page 6: Spermatazoon replaced with Spermatozoon
Page 44: spermatazoon replaced with spermatozoon
Page 87: spermatozoan replaced with spermatozoon
Page 132: trangress replaced with transgress
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