Sex
Medieval medical writers and natural philosophers, as opposed to
theologians, viewed sex as necessary to both men and women. Without a
regular outlet for sexual desire both sexes were likely to become ill.
Male seed, and the female equivalent which many writers believed to exist
and be discharged by the woman during orgasm, had to be eliminated from
the body periodically, just as other discharges such as phlegm, saliva,
etc. Thus, sexual pleasure of the woman was regarded as a precondition of
conception. Without orgasm, it was thought, ejaculation of the 'female
seed' would not occur and conception could not take place. Women were
then expected to take pleasure in sex. It was commonplace in writing that
women were naturally more lustful and voracious in their sexual appetites
than men, and that they could easily exhaust and destroy their husbands'
with their relentlessness.
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