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Circumcision

2,161 bytes added, 15:34, 20 November 2019
Improve prophylactic section.
===Christianity===
Jesus was born into a Jewish family in Israel, where Judaism was the prevailing religion, so he was circumcised on the eighth day.<ref name="luke2:21>{{REFweb |url=https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+2%3A21&version=NASB |title=Gospel of Luke |trans-title= |language= |last=Luke |first= |author-link= |publisher=NASB |website=Bible Gateway |date= |accessdate=2019-11-10 |format= |quote=And when eight days had passed, before His circumcision, His name was then called Jesus, the name given by the angel before He was conceived in the womb.}}</ref> The first Christians had been born Jewish, so a question arose whether one must be circumcised to be a Christian. When Christian leaders met at the Council at Jerusalem in the First Century to decide what was required to be a Christian, a letter was written to explain the requirements, but circumcision was omitted from the requirements.<ref>{{REFweb
|url=https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts+15%3A1-30&version=NASB
|title=Acts 15:1-30
====Arguments of prophylaxia====
Though the practice of ritual circumcision of males, both consenting and non-consenting, has existed for millenia, the search for "potential medical benefits" began relatively recently. The discussion of circumcision in the Ninth Edition of the ''Encyclopǽdia Britannica'' (1876) made no mention of any prophylactic, medical, or therapeutic value or function.<ref>{{REFweb |url=http://www.cirp.org/library/history/encyclopaediabritannica1876/ |title=Circumcision |trans-title= |language= |last=Cheyne |first=T. K. |author-link= |publisher=Encyclopǽdia Brittanica |website=Circumcision Reference Library |date=1876 |accessdate=2019-11-10 |format= |quote=}}</ref> Initially, circumcision was adopted as a way to stop boys and men from masturbating, where masturbation was seen as the cause for many diseases. As the myth that circumcision prevented [[masturbation]] became debunked, advocates of circumcision began the great search to find the "medical benefits" of circumcision.
Male and female circumcision involves the removal and disruption of normal anatomical structures that are primary areas of sexual sensation.<ref name="taylor1996" /> In the past, some advocates of mass circumcision have considered the prepuce to be a "mistake of nature,"<ref>
<nowiki>{{Cold and Wiswell (1995)}} | [[Template:Cold and Wiswell (1995)|see more]]</nowiki></p>
</ref> but this notion has no validity because the prepuce is ubiquitous in primates and because it provides functional advantages.<refname="cold-mcgrath1995">{{REFbook
|last=Cold
|first=Christopher
===Search for prophylactic reasons===
 
The practice of finding prophylactic reasons for infant circumcision started in Germany in the nineteenth century, when Christian Germans criticized the Jewish practice of infant circumcision, Jewish doctors sprang to the defense of the religious practice by claiming health benefits.<ref name="ephron2001">{{REFbook
|last=Ephron
|first=John M.
|author-link=
|year=2001
|title=Medicine and the German Jews
|url=http://www.cirp.org/library/history/ephron1/
|work=
|editor=
|edition=
|volume=
|chapter=6
|pages=222-233
|location=New Haven
|publisher=Yale University Press
|isbn=0-300-08377-7
|quote=
|accessdate=2019-11-20
|note=
}}</ref> And so started the long tradition of Jewish doctors inventing reasons for circumcision (and deceving gentile doctors).
Following the discovery of bacteria as a cause of many diseases – such as tuberculosis – the search began for other illnesses that could be prevented by circumcision.
In the 1920s it was penile cancer<ref>. Abraham L. Wolbarst (1926) claims that circumcision can prevent penile cancer. <ref name="wolbarst1926">{{REFjournal
|last=Wolbarst
|first=Abraham L.
|issue=4
|pages=301-10
}}</ref>, in the 1940 1940s, prostate- and tongue cancer as well as STDs<ref>. Eugene H. Hand (1949) falsely explains that circumcision somehow protects against venereal diseases and tongue cancer. <ref name="hand1949">{{REFjournal
|title=Circumcision and venereal disease.
|last=Hand
|issue=3
|pages=341-346
}}</ref>.  In the 1950s it was cervical cancer<ref>. Abraham Ravich (1951) invents the myth that circumcision reduces the risk of women getting cervical cancer. <ref name="ravich1951">{{REFjournal
|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14853120
|title=Prophylaxis of cancer of the prostate, penis, and cervix by circumcision
|pubmedID=14853120
|accessdate=2019-10-12
}}</ref></ref>, in the late 1960s it was neuroses<ref>. Morris Fishbein (1969) calls for circumcision to prevent nervousness and, of course, [[masturbation]]. {{REFbook
|last=Fishbein
|first=Morris
|url=https://openlibrary.org/works/OL95362W/Modern_home_medical_adviser
|accessdate=2019-10-12
}}</ref></ref>, in the 1970s bladder- and rectal cancer<ref>. Abraham Ravich (1971) claims that circumcision would prevent bladder cancer and rectal cancer. {{REFjournal
|last=Ravich
|first=Abraham
|pages=1493-1496
|accessdate=2019-10-12
}}</ref>, and in </ref>  In the 1980s , UTIs<ref>. Thomas E. Wiswell (1985) claims that circumcision , using a methodologically flawed report, reduces the risk of urinary tract infections. <ref name="wiswell1985">{{REFjournal
|last=Wiswell
|first=Thomas E.
|pages=901-903
|accessdate=2019-10-12
}}</ref> and AIDS<ref> Aaron J. Fink (1986) claims that circumcision protects against AIDS. <ref name="fink1986">{{REFjournal
|last=Fink
|first=Aaron J.
|url=https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM198610303151818
|DOI=10.1056/NEJM198610303151818
|accessdate=2019-11-20}}</ref></ref> followed. Retrospectively, circumcision was always advertised as a cure for whatever disease was in the public spotlight at the time.
The sheer mass of studies and publications that were released during those almost 180 years on this topic are the reason that even arguments that have been disproved multiple times, especially regarding infant and child circumcision, tenaciously persist up until today.
[[Category:Judaism]]
[[Category:Circumcision]]
[[category:Male circumcision]]
[[de:Zirkumzision]]
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