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CHAPTER III

THE LAWS OF SEXUAL ATTRACTION

Carmen:


"L'amour est un oiseau rebelle,
Que nul ne peut apprivoiser:
Et c'est bien en vain qu'on Pappelle
S'il lui convient de refuser.
Rien n'y fait; menace ou priere:
L'un parle, l'autre se tait;
Et c'est l'autre que je prefere;
II n'a rien dit, mais il me plait.
. . . . .
L'amour est enfant de Bohême
II n'a jamais connu de loi."

It has been recognised from time immemorial that, in all forms of sexually differentiated life, there exists an attraction between males and females, between the male and the female, the object of which is procreation. But as the male and the female are merely abstract conceptions which never appear in the real world, we cannot speak of sexual attraction as a simple attempt of the masculine and the feminine to come together. The theory which I am developing must take into account all the facts of sexual relations if it is to be complete; indeed, if it is to be accepted instead of the older views, it must give a better interpretation of all these sexual phenomena. My recognition of the fact that M and F (maleness and femaleness) are distributed in the living world in every possible proportion has led me to the discovery of an unknown natural law, of a law not yet suspected by any philosopher, a law of sexual attraction. As