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    Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?

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    • H
      herenow @bot-mod
      last edited by

      This post is deleted!
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      • jamezb46J
        jamezb46 @Alomongerpete
        last edited by

        @Alomongerpete Obviously

        In time there is life but no knowledge; outside time there is knowledge but no life

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          Peatful @wester130
          last edited by

          @wester130 said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

          His love of painting, art and poetry

          His recommendation of progesterone

          A preference for an introspective, reflective thoughtful life

          Your title question is about what he believed
          But
          Your text above is about who he was
          So im unsure of what you are asking

          I comment to point out
          Have you seen his subjects of a majority of his artwork?
          Naked women

          He was a man who found beauty in women

          Extremely “androgenic” although nothing to do with mass or hair etc

          One act of obedience is better than one hundred sermons.

          -DB

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          • Crypt KeeperC
            Crypt Keeper
            last edited by

            Well I guess Jacob was preferred by God to Esau. So there's that.

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            • alfredoolivasA
              alfredoolivas @jamezb46
              last edited by

              @jamezb46 @Alomongerpete
              The effect on libido isn't clear.

              Progesterone therapy in men (transgender women), does not significantly effect, testosterone, libido and weight

              Does male sexual behavior require progesterone?

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              • H
                herenow
                last edited by herenow

                I envisioned Peat as a mythical autistic hermit. I kind of Yoda

                I found out he was married for decades when he died and the image shattered. Still hard to imagine

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                  Corngold @herenow
                  last edited by

                  @Dedeluded said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                  I found out he was married for decades when he died and the image shattered. Still hard to imagine

                  Interesting... pretty sure if you listen to his radio shows someone asked if he was married and he said no. Maybe he just didn't want to reveal too much to complete strangers?

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                  • H
                    herenow @Corngold
                    last edited by

                    @Corngold said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                    @Dedeluded said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                    I found out he was married for decades when he died and the image shattered. Still hard to imagine

                    Interesting... pretty sure if you listen to his radio shows someone asked if he was married and he said no. Maybe he just didn't want to reveal too much to complete strangers?

                    I assume to protect his wife

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                    • R
                      Rah1woot @herenow
                      last edited by Rah1woot

                      @Dedeluded Per my memory of the interviews...

                      Ray didn't like the concept of marriage, as a form of authoritarian ownership. He'd been with a woman together for many decades but I'm not sure to what extent it was a marriage, or something they thought of as such.

                      In another interview, Ray was asked what to do if a spouse died. After some grieving he said that one had to go "out to find a suitable replacement", which earned some laughs from the interviewers.

                      I tend to think he was a stone-cold guy who didn't feel the need to establish a legalized exclusivity of his woman. And not really putting her on a pedestal as The One and Only (if she were to die) at the same time.

                      I suppose it makes sense in the grander view of metabolism. Grieving for inappropriately long is almost a form of constipation.

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                        herenow @Rah1woot
                        last edited by herenow

                        That's one of the things I liked about him. I didn't want to imagine him drinking a beer and pushing a mower across a lawn or doing "normal" stuff.

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                          Corngold @herenow
                          last edited by

                          @heretoday
                          He's right on many things but cringe on others. Surprising he managed mostly independent thought through the liberal / socialist revolution period, but many of those views seem to have stuck with him.

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                            herenow @Corngold
                            last edited by herenow

                            @Corngold In my mind the weirdness created the context for the possibility of unique and correct knowledge. Odd political, economic and social views fit right in.

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                              natureman
                              last edited by

                              Wtf is this thread? Peat once made an infertile woman ovulate by lending her his cardigan. And that's no joke.

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                                Corngold @natureman
                                last edited by

                                @natureman Rizzmond Peat

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                                  herenow @natureman
                                  last edited by

                                  @natureman said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                                  Peat once made an infertile woman ovulate by lending her his cardigan.

                                  that's fine but giving away clothing isn't the most macho thing I've ever heard.

                                  Is the rest of the story that she gave birth to several science writers?

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                                    random @wester130
                                    last edited by random

                                    @wester130 said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                                    His love of painting, art and poetry

                                    His recommendation of progesterone

                                    A preference for an introspective, reflective thoughtful life

                                    I think he mentioned fertility for men several times, and fertility is one of the most common factors or the most commun factor associated with male, I'm not sure, I think he also mentioned that he often had sex dreams.

                                    If you give credence to theories, Georgie has shared study(s) where progesterone and pregnenolone are most beneficial for male fertility, and that high dose testosterone reduces fertility.

                                    https://lowtoxinforum.com/threads/male-fertility-depends-on-intensity-of-sperm-metabolism.32004/

                                    Even if it varies from species to species, the other factors that are commonly associated with males are generally the ability and propensity to compete and fight, fighting physiognomy, and what you have mentionned do not fully prevent that

                                    Also if you look at what is said about animals, for example moose, rams, they don't breed and fight all year round, they do it specifically during the rut at a specific time of the year, so even these two main elements that are associated with males are manifested in specific context

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                                      Ponder @random
                                      last edited by

                                      @random said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                                      the other factors that are commonly associated with males are generally the ability and propensity to compete and fight, fighting physiognomy, and what you have mentionned do not fully prevent that

                                      me: do you think being competitive has a place in a healthy individual or would they be fairly indifferent about being better than others?

                                      ray: I think it’s a form of neurosis

                                      me: what do you think of chess as a hobby? Does mental exercise have the same potential to be anti-metabolic as physical exercise does?

                                      ray: I think the abstract nature of games makes them potentially harmful, addictive.

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                                        Corngold @Ponder
                                        last edited by Corngold

                                        @Ponder said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                                        ray: I think it’s a form of neurosis

                                        From a capitalist, and an anti-capitalist, socialist etc perspective, competition is always "bad" because it means amoral exploitation for paper money, and they always see "competition" as code for a "free market" economy.

                                        I generally agree with Peat, though. The most competitive people I've known seemed to feel: inadequate, weak, unloved, etc. Some of the top school athletes are also some of the worst behaved, with irresponsible/bad parents, and drugs, sex, or gambling habits.

                                        The question is competition within which realm?
                                        Hyper-competitiveness is neurosis while hypo-competitiveness is like depression / anhedonia. There has to be some give and take, so it's inaccurate to say it is neurotic to receive pleasure from a stimulating activity, let's just say of a constructive sort, like academics or research, music, engineering, or something. Whether or not any of these things have progressed because of competition is a good question. I suspect it's the peak area of the inverted-U curve here, where stimulation and play are highest, in between anhedonia and cut-throat neurosis.

                                        @Ponder said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                                        ray: I think the abstract nature of games makes them potentially harmful, addictive.

                                        Philosophy and basically all language, poetry, writing, mathematics is filed under this one. See: Wittgenstein and also Heraclitus. I think both were obviously neurotic but their neurosis was also ironically about the neurosis of language / communication. "Language as neurosis" is a very likely reality.

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                                        • ThinPickingT
                                          ThinPicking @Corngold
                                          last edited by

                                          @Corngold said in Peat did not believe in the androgenic man?:

                                          "Language as neurosis" is a very likely reality.

                                          Sounds accurate. Hopefully someone can get to the bottom of this "neurosis".

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                                            Ponder @Corngold
                                            last edited by

                                            @Corngold I think he is just thinks about mutual aid and Ray hints at the part about abstraction because he has critiqued abstract art and now I realize he probably doesn't like abstraction and would need to look more into his thoughts on abstraction.

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