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  • September 6, 2010

Scientists find that porn is good for society

March 10, 2010
Posted by Jules Siegel

By Mil­ton Diamond

Over the years, many sci­en­tists have inves­ti­gated the link between pornog­ra­phy (con­sid­ered legal under the First Amend­ment in the United States unless judged “obscene”) and sex crimes and atti­tudes towards women. And in every region inves­ti­gated, researchers have found that as pornog­ra­phy has increased in avail­abil­ity, sex crimes have either decreased or not increased.

Michael Gold­stein and Harold Kant found that rapists were more likely than non­rapists in the prison pop­u­la­tion to have been pun­ished for look­ing at pornog­ra­phy while a young­ster, while other research has shown that incar­cer­ated non­rapists had seen more pornog­ra­phy, and seen it at an ear­lier age, than rapists. What does cor­re­late highly with sex offense is a strict, repres­sive reli­gious upbring­ing. Richard Green too has reported that both rapists and child moles­ters use less pornog­ra­phy than a con­trol group of

Stud­ies of men who had seen X-​​rated movies found that they were sig­nif­i­cantly more tol­er­ant and accept­ing of women than those men who didn’t see those movies, and stud­ies by other investigators—female as well as male—essentially found sim­i­larly that there was no detectable rela­tion­ship between the amount of expo­sure to pornog­ra­phy and any mea­sure of misog­y­nist atti­tudes. No researcher or critic has found the oppo­site, that expo­sure to pornography—by any definition—has had a cause-​​and-​​effect rela­tion­ship towards ill feel­ings or actions against women. No cor­re­la­tion has even been found between expo­sure to porn and cal­loused atti­tudes toward women.

Read the rest: Porn: Good for us? — The Sci­en­tist — Mag­a­zine of the Life Sci­ences.
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