phy of Immanuel Kant.
That idea is under considerable threat from femininity. Women are equipped
to a high degree with the art of creating the illusion that they are really asexual
and that their sexuality is only a concession to Man. For if this illusion were to
cease, what would become of the competition of several, or indeed many, men
for one woman? However, with the support of men who have believed them,
women today have almost succeeded in persuading the opposite sex that the
most important, most characteristic, need of Man is sexuality, that he can expect
the ful¤llment of his truest and deepest desires only from Woman, and that
chastity, for him, is something unnatural and impossible. How often are young
men who ¤nd satisfaction in serious work told by women, to whom they do not
seem too ugly and too unpromising as lovers or sons-in-law, not to study too
hard, but to “enjoy life.”