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posted by janrinok on Monday August 01 2016, @06:42PM   Printer-friendly
from the am-I-going-to-regret-releasing-this? dept.

EurekAlert have just published an article: Yale researchers shed light on evolutionary mystery: Origins of the female orgasm

The role of female orgasm, which plays no obvious role in human reproduction, has intrigued scholars as far back as Aristotle. Numerous theories have tried to explain the origins of the trait, but most have concentrated on its role in human and primate biology.

[...] Since there is no apparent association between orgasm and number of offspring or successful reproduction in humans, the scientists focused on a specific physiological trait that accompanies human female orgasm -- the neuro-endocrine discharge of prolactin and oxytocin -- and looked for this activity in other placental mammals. They found that in many mammals this reflex plays a role in ovulation.


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  • (Score: 2) by krishnoid on Monday August 01 2016, @08:20PM

    by krishnoid (1156) on Monday August 01 2016, @08:20PM (#382796)

    Maybe the female orgasm has no role in reproduction, but as anyone with a GF or Wife can attest it DOES play a critical role in human survival.

    After reproduction, however, does it serve a purpose?

    Your chances of living long and having a fulfilled life hinge greatly of having a happy companion.

    *Your* chances aren't that relevant. But that's a great point -- from a human species survival perspective, how relevant is having a happy human companion to your _offspring's_ life:

    • a life long enough to reproduce,
    • one fulfilled enough to find someone to reproduce with, and
    • a behavioral role model suitable to pass those traits (?) on to their own offspring?
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