This is getting silly and tedious. An example of why I don't want to finger through your website, but would rather you present your own argument:Rising Tree said:Got it for you right here:
If you want something to click on and read for yourself, you may do so here. http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/~timm/personal/n/research.html. There is a TON of evidence in this site, which I invite you to read for yourself and decide whether nudism really isn't as bad as you paint it out to be. There are no pictures on this page; I take no responsibility for any nudity in any links external to that website.
- Marilyn Story, in the Journal of Psychology, Vol. 118, first Half,
Sept. 1984, "Comparisons of Body Self-Concept between Social Nudists & Nonnudists"- Marilyn Story, in Jour. of Social Psychology, 1979, 108, 49-56 "Factors
Associated w/More Positive Body Self-Concepts in Preschool children"- Robin Lewis & Louis Janda, in The Relationship Between Adult Sexual
Adjustment & Childhood Experiences Regarding Exposure to Nudity,
Sleeping in the Parental Bed, &Parental Attitudes Toward Sexuality, Arch. of Sexual Behavior, Vol. 17, No.4, 1988- Marilyn Story in "A Comparison of Social Nudists & Non-nudists on
Experience w/Various Sexual Outlets" Journ. of Sex Research, Vol. 23, No. 2, pp 197-211, May 1987
I'm using objective science here, not subjective interpretations and opinions. The facts speak for themselves.
Problem? The actual study IS NOT HERE.From the provided Website said:Story, Marilyn D. 1979. Factors associated with more positive body self-concepts in preschool children. In The Journal of Social Psychology Volume 108, pp 49-56.
An interesting look at what influences children's self-image. The key findings are that (1) gender (whether the child is a boy or a girl) affects body self-concept - boys have a higher self-concept than girls - and (2) nudism has an even stronger effect - nudists have a higher self-concept than non-nudists. Other factors, such as race, age, family structure, area of US they were from, did not significantly affect subjects' body self-concept.
How is a "more possitive self-concept" defined, and by whom? This is not some sort of scientific proof, it is a study that explains how certain things bear on the development of a persons outlook on their body. The value judgements about what is better or worse, however, lie fully in the hands of the person or people who devised the study.
I may or may not agree with them, but there's really no way to tell given this sort of vague information, and I have absolutely no time for wandering through this website to find whatever it is I am supposed to be learning here.
I don't see the difficulty in people simply presenting their own arguments. I'm sorry if you don't have the time either. Perhaps that is a big part of the problem.
Upvote
0