Body pleasure: Difference between revisions
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{{SEEALSO}} | {{SEEALSO}} | ||
* [[Circumcision and violence]] | * [[Circumcision and violence]] | ||
{{LINKS}} | |||
* {{REFjournal | |||
|last=Prescott | |||
|init=JW | |||
|author-link=James W. Prescott | |||
|url=http://www.violence.de/prescott/letters/Sixteen_Principles.pdf | |||
|title=Sixteen Principles For Personal, Family and Global Peace | |||
|journal=The Truth Seeker | |||
|date=March 1989 | |||
|volume= | |||
|issue= | |||
|pages=33 | |||
|format=PDF | |||
|accessdate=2022-11-02 | |||
}} | |||
{{REF}} | {{REF}} | ||
Revision as of 18:13, 30 November 2025
Construction Site
This article is work in progress and not yet part of the free encyclopedia IntactiWiki.
Body pleasure is a term that appears to have been coined by the late James W. Prescott, Ph.D., in 1975. Dr. Prescott related deprivation of physical pleasure to expression of physical violence.[1]
See also
External links
Prescott JW. Sixteen Principles For Personal, Family and Global Peace
. The Truth Seeker. 1 March 1989; : 33. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
References
- ↑
Prescott JW. Body Pleasure and the Origins of Violence. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. November 1975; : 10-20. Retrieved 2 November 2022.