Reproduction and sexuality in women, today - an anthropological approach - 27/06/08
Résumé |
The sexual and the cultural revolution of the second half of the last century and the technological advancement in contraceptive methods marked one anthropological milestone in sexual identity and behavior mainly in women.
Anthropology, a human science, became also philosophy in the six Century with the“cogito ergo sum” of Descartes defined as a New Humanism manifesto.
One century later more specifically Kant published “The anthropology from the pragmatist point of view” introducing the Anthropological Philosophy. This new branch of philosophy developed itself in the beginning of the last century, especially in Germany (Scheler, Plessner e Ghelen) facing the problem of the human being in the World as opposed to Psychology, Psychoanalysis and other branch of Philosophy (mainly the Existentialism and the Phenomenology).
From the biological to the clinical perspective in humans without doubt, Women are the main protagonists of reproduction. This main function of life, integrates with conscious, unconscious and behavioral level (instincts, emotions, feelings, thoughts), notwithstanding the cultural and technological progress. This remains a crucial problem in the correlation between reproduction and sexuality in the new dimension of Woman identity in sociology in general, and in the sexual sociology between woman and man.
The epistemological analysis of reproductive problems in human, for the large numbers of variables pertains to the Complexity Category, which needs as we know a specific approach that only the Anthropology could be able to give.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Vol 17 - N° S1
P. 47 - janvier-mars 2008 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.