--- In Baraya_Sunda@yahoogroups.com, Maria Astati <maria.ast...@...> wrote:
>
> Nu ieu mah leres pisang kang Waluya hehehehe...
> 
>   

Teh M,

Mani geer euy! :))

jadi inhet kana tulisan Desmon Morris taun 2004 perkara wujud kaum hawa. Aya 
resensina yeuh! Kuring keur ngahanca buku Morris perkara kaum Adam (The Naked 
Man).

Wilujeng ngeunteung atuh! ;)) R

'The Naked Woman': Highly Intelligent Design
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By HELEN FISHER
Published: August 28, 2005
''THE sight of a feather in a peacock's tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me 
sick,'' Darwin confided to his son Francis some time before writing ''The 
Origin of Species.'' Darwin felt this cumbersome, apparently useless 
accouterment undermined his theory that all species' traits evolved via natural 
selection to help individuals survive. Not until he developed his corollary 
theory of sexual selection did he realize that such apparently nonfunctional 
characteristics evolved to win the mating game. Those peacocks with the most 
flamboyant tail feathers attracted more peahens and sired more young, passing 
on their genes for this outlandish ornament.

Enlarge This Image
 
Marianna Trofimova
THE NAKED WOMAN 
A Study of the Female Body.
By Desmond Morris. 
Illustrated. 276 pp. Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Press. $25.95.

Forum: Book News and Reviews

Private Collection/St. Martin's
Desmond Morris.
Like peacocks, women (and men) have evolved a host of ornaments. In ''The Naked 
Woman: A Study of the Female Body,'' the zoologist Desmond Morris gives us a 
guided tour of female body parts, often with Darwin's principle of sexual 
selection in mind. Many of these feminine trimmings, he reports, evolved at 
least in part to attract a mate. Morris starts with scalp hair, which grows 
much longer than that of all other primates. These tresses can signal health, 
age, status or affiliation in both sexes, but women more regularly use their 
locks for sex appeal. Moving downward to ears, eyes, mouth, neck, hands, 
breasts, belly and so on to feet, Morris explores the biology, evolution and 
functions of each feminine feature, illustrating his arguments with the customs 
of the ancient Egyptians, classical Greeks, modern Americans and many other 
peoples around the world.

Take a woman's lips. These puffy, everted organs are unique among primates, 
Morris tells us. But while men's lips become thinner in adulthood, more like 
those of monkeys and apes, women's remain pillowy and everted throughout the 
childbearing years, when they serve as sexual signals. During sexual arousal 
they become redder, engorged and sensitive, mimicking the genital labia.

Women throughout history have highlighted their lips for sexual purposes, from 
classical Greeks who applied lip colorings of dyes mixed with human saliva, 
sheep sweat and crocodile dung to contemporary Americans who pay surgeons to 
enlarge their lips by inserting synthetic material, freeze-dried skin or body 
fat.

Women's everted lips are a good example of neoteny, the extension of childlike 
characteristics into adulthood, an evolutionary process Morris returns to 
frequently throughout the book. Women have more neotenous physical traits than 
men do. For example, pound for pound the average adult woman has about twice as 
much body fat, an infantile trait, as the average man. Women also have higher, 
more childlike voices and smoother, more finely boned baby faces, traits that 
Morris maintains evolved to elicit protective responses in their male mates.

Morris brings not just his scientific curiosity to his subject, but also his 
sense of justice. Filming an American television series on the human sexes a 
few years ago, he became ''disturbed and angry . . . with the way women were 
being treated in many countries.'' So when he was asked to prepare a new 
edition of his 1985 book, ''Bodywatching,'' he decided to devote the work to 
the female. The result, ''The Naked Woman,'' incorporates only a small portion 
of the text from the original book.

He describes women's most dramatic maltreatment in his chapter on female 
genitals. The clitoris, he notes, is a bundle of some 8,000 nerve fibers, the 
most sensitive region of the female body. But today some 100 million women in 
more than 20 countries, largely in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, have 
suffered painful genital mutilation. In its most extreme form, a girl's outer 
labia, inner labia and clitoris are scraped or cut off. Her vaginal opening is 
sewn up with silk, catgut or thorns, leaving a minute passage for urine and 
menstrual blood. Then her legs are tied together to make sure scar tissue 
forms, permanently altering the genital region. Her husband will forcibly 
reopen her vulva, but if he travels, it may be sewn up again. These operations 
often cause severe infections, even death.

For all its heartfelt advocacy, ''The Naked Woman'' has its faults. Morris 
sometimes repeats old material, and he gets some facts wrong. For example, in 
discussing our long past as hunter-gatherers, he says, ''In ancient times, the 
great deity was always a woman.'' Although this is a popular belief, 
anthropologists have no hard evidence for it. For the most part, however, ''The 
Naked Woman'' lives up to the high standard Morris set for himself in many of 
his more than 30 previous books, including ''The Naked Ape.'' He champions the 
current data suggesting that women are by nature more fluent in speech than 
men, better at handling several tasks at once and more manually dexterous. In 
fact, after noting that most exceptional pianists are men, he writes, ''If a 
slightly smaller keyboard was made . . . female pianists would easily outplay 
their male counterparts.'' In an age when many educated people resist the 
voluminous data on the biological variations between the sexes, Morris's 
unapologetic description of myriad gender differences is refreshing.

Perhaps most important, Morris reiterates an anthropological tenet: for 
millions of years humankind lived in societies where women and men were 
regarded as different but largely equal. Today women in many cultures are 
gradually returning to their ancient human status. And in a time when some 
people question the concept of evolution, Morris's book gives an elegant view 
of nature's timeless evolutionary processes and one of its most sophisticated 
creations: woman.

Helen Fisher, an anthropologist at Rutgers University, is the author of ''Why 
We Love: The Nature and Chemistry of Romantic Love.''

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/books/review/28FISHERL.html?_r=1

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