Sexosophy
Sexosophy, according to the famed sexologist John Money, must be distinguished from sexology, as he states in the following:
The practitioners of sex research do not, in general, differentiate between sexology and sexosophy. Most of them, in fact, ride the ideological bandwagon of whatever is currently being funded as the "in-thing" in sexosophy. Current funding is predominantly in support of the opponents of what has become known as the sexual revolution of the 1960s and '70s, but which is more accurately named as a sexual reformation.[1]
Sexology tells us, from carefully and correctly done scientific research, that sexual relationships between male adults and minors of any age, do not usually cause any physical or psychological harm to the minors.
"Sexosophy," on the other hand, promotes a litany of "serious harms" to minors engaging in sexual activity with adults. These claims are not based on carefully and correctly done scientific research--they are merely the moral and "religious" rantings of sexophobes and antisexuals
Reference
- ↑ John Money PhD (1988) Commentary, Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality, 1:1, 5-16, DOI: 10.1300/J056v01n01_02