Close

Page 1 of 2 1 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 30 of 44
  1. #1
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default Article by James V. Kohl

    visit-red-300x50PNG
    Perfuming the

    mind
    Entelechy: Mind and Culture
    http://www.entelechyjournal.com/

    The article offers some

    basic info with alternative biologically based explanations for reports that we are primarily visual

    creatures.


    JVK

  2. #2
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    11
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    This article was a good

    read

  3. #3
    Phero Pro NaughtieGirl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Way too far North!
    Posts
    974
    Rep Power
    7104

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by supefly
    This article

    was a good read
    Yes, thank you JV!

    I'll be printing them both out so I can read them as soon

    as I get a chance!
    Treasure Every Moment that you have
    Yesterday is History - Tomorrow is a Mystery
    Today is a Gift - That's why It's called the Present!
    (Unknown source)

  4. #4
    Phero Enthusiast chicago's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    370
    Rep Power
    7046

    Default

    nice article,

    jvk
    ________
    Cheap box vaporizers
    Last edited by chicago; 04-08-2011 at 03:25 PM.

  5. #5
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Thanks all; let me know if there's

    something specific you would like me to address in a follow-up article. For example, the ratio of the 2nd digit

    (your pointer finger) to the 4th digit (your ring finger) is different in men and women (and some reports say that

    it varies with sexual orientation). Quite a few articles link the difference to levels of testosterone in the womb.

    So far, no one has hinted at the probability that there is a correlate between 2D:4D and a more masculine or more

    feminine scent signature. If 2D:4D is a function of testosterone, we should be able to sniff out differences in

    scent that vary with the ratio.

    Though I may not respond to you directly, I'll consider any input for

    another article.

    JVK

  6. #6
    Enlightened One
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Posts
    4,678
    Rep Power
    8402

    Default

    v. good article JV Kohl - ive

    cutted and paste to my PC along with a lot of youre other articles for future reference thanks

  7. #7
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    23
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    JVK,

    I haven't read your

    other work but you make some very strong statements regarding the efficacy and importance of pheromones, not only in

    humans, but in all mammals.

    For example:
    "People are the only mammals who incorporate conscious processing into

    what they think when they see another person.[3] Other mammals do not think about the visual appeal of a potential

    mate; their sexual behavior is biologically directed by the unconscious affect of pheromones on hormone levels."



    This implies that pheromones are the basis of all sexual preferences and behavior, which you also go on to

    directly state; but if this is true, then what about babies who were born vomeronasally impaired or anosmic? Are

    there studies showing that these children have lower or non-existent sex drives? What about in other species?



    Another interesting phenomenon is how some people find traits visually attractive (simply from a photograph) even

    though they could not have come across these traits during childhood, and could not have established the pheromonal

    link.

    You also state that: "The unconscious affect of pheromones on hormones directly links olfactory input and

    changes in our hormone levels to what we see... Once visual appeal is conditioned to pheromones, olfactory input is

    no longer required. "
    From my readings about the vomeronasal complex, I understood that it is entirely separate

    from the olfactory system. Does the olfactory system play a role as well, and is it as strong a role?

  8. #8
    Moderator Mtnjim's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    SAN DIEGO
    Posts
    2,481
    Rep Power
    8364

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    ...Are there

    studies showing that these children have lower or non-existent sex drives? What about in other species?
    i

    can't answer the other questions, but the answer to this one is "Yes"!
    There are also studies that show when

    people later in life loose their ability to smell, either through illness or injury, their sex drives disappears.
    Freedom begins when you tell Mrs. Grundy to go fly a kite.
    --Lazarus Long

  9. #9
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    JVK,
    ... what

    about babies who were born vomeronasally impaired or anosmic? Are there studies showing that these children have

    lower or non-existent sex drives?
    The human vomeronasal organ presence and function is a dead

    issue--debated to no end. It is not required to process pheromones in humans and in several other species. Male

    children who are anosmic (no sense of smell) from birth were reported to exhibit emotional apathy, have no interest

    in dating, etc--or more simply put "they don't fall in love."

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    What about in other

    species?
    Anosmia from birth means the animal will show no sexual interest.



    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    Another interesting phenomenon is how some people find traits visually attractive

    (simply from a photograph) even though they could not have come across these traits during childhood, and could not

    have established the pheromonal link.
    Explained below

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    You also state

    that: "The unconscious affect of pheromones on hormones directly links olfactory input and changes in our hormone

    levels to what we see... Once visual appeal is conditioned to pheromones, olfactory input is no longer required.

    "
    What don't you understand regarding the ability of pheromones to condition the response to a

    picture? Ever see a picture advertisement for food that made you want the food? It's the chemical appeal of the

    food that makes it look good; it's the chemical appeal of people that makes them look good--whether or not the food

    or the person is physically there.

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    From my readings about the vomeronasal complex, I

    understood that it is entirely separate from the olfactory system. Does the olfactory system play a role as well,

    and is it as strong a role?
    You could forget everything you read or think you know about the VNO;

    pheromones elicit a hormone response which explains their effect on behavior. Unconscious affect=the hormone

    response; the hormone response effects behavior.

    Thanks for your interest; it would help you to read my

    book.

    JVK

  10. #10
    Kodachrome Forever! Gegogi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Lost
    Posts
    2,708
    Rep Power
    7643

    Default

    I don't doubt our internal

    responses to pheromones are involuntary. However it would be unfair not to mention the role of freewill in the

    resulting social and sexual behavior. I've gotten involved with women I wanted so bad I thought my little willie

    would explode. I couldn't stop thinking about them and could barely draw myself away. Nevertheless I later decided

    to flee from her for various reasons: too young (jail bait), big mean husband, incompatible lifestyle, etc. Yes, the

    attraction was uncontrollable but the actions resulting from the attraction can easily contradict the biological

    urge.
    "I'm just a dirty hornytoad" -Gegogi

  11. #11
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    23
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jvkohl
    Originally

    Posted by pherohero
    Another interesting phenomenon is how some people find traits visually attractive

    (simply from a photograph) even though they could not have come across these traits during childhood, and could

    not have established the pheromonal link.



    Explained below


    Quote:
    Originally Posted by

    pherohero
    You also state that: "The unconscious affect of pheromones on hormones directly links olfactory

    input and changes in our hormone levels to what we see... Once visual appeal is conditioned to pheromones, olfactory

    input is no longer required. "




    What don't you understand regarding the ability of pheromones to

    condition the response to a picture?
    Thanks for the response, JV, but it seems like you jumped the gun

    there. You were just too quick to assume I didnt understand the sort of conditioning you were talking about, but I

    took that into account when constructing my question.

    I understand that people can be conditioned to respond a

    certain way to certain visual or aural cues, based on association. My question was: how can people be attracted to

    traits they could not have been conditioned to, because they have not seen them before (because they are facial

    features that belong to members of a race they have not been physically exposed to).

    For example, showing

    members of certain remote tribes living in landlocked regions of the world pictures of people with very different

    facial features can turn them on more than pictures of ordinary people in their tribe. How do they 'know' these

    far away people whom they have never sniffed before are hot?
    Also, how can the attraction for those with genetic

    dissimilarities be explained in light of what we know about pheromones? That they are the basis of all sexual

    attraction, and that preference for any other traits are formed through conditioning.
    Most young children (and

    members of remote tribes) spend most of their time exposed to people with similar genes (family, etc), so wouldnt

    they be conditioned to be hot for people who look like themselves?

    Lastly, and on a more personal note, I know

    it's hard not to assume other people are flat out stupid when you're part of the MENSA/intellectual crowd, but at

    least you can try.

  12. #12
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    ...how can people

    be attracted to traits they could not have been conditioned to, because they have not seen them before (because they

    are facial features that belong to members of a race they have not been physically exposed to).
    We

    are conditioned to respond to pheromones associated with genetic differences -- XX or XY dependent

    genetic/hormonal
    /pheromonal differences, but also differences in the HLA/immune system (e.g., tissue type).

    People can be attracted to genetically distinct phenotypes (how genes structure the features of a person) either due

    to novelty, or due to similarity. With no exposure to racial traits such as skin color, the likely response to lack

    of exposure (novelty) is fear of darker skin color, which also signals higher testosterone levels, and increased

    androgenic/dominant male pheromone production.

    We can also be conditioned to respond to more

    estrogenic/child-like or female features (e.g., lighter skin) due to more common associations with features that are

    close to the maximum signals of estrogen. When we then encounter the maximum signals of estrogen, we respond with

    increased attraction.

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    Also, how can the attraction for those with genetic

    dissimilarities be explained in light of what we know about pheromones?
    Selection for genetic

    diversity via pheromones is the only way most mammals can avoid inbreeding. It works because they adapt to the

    pheromones of close kin, and because they cannot adapt to the immediate effects on their hormone levels of novel

    potential mates.

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    Lastly, and on a more personal note, I know it's hard not to assume

    other people are flat out stupid when you're part of the MENSA/intellectual crowd, but at least you can

    try.
    I made no such assumption. Perhaps you assumed that you knew enough about conditioning to ask

    "new" questions. If my response seemed terse, it's because I've answered the same questions many times--and my

    book is all inclusive. Still, I did my best, and thanked you for your interest. Making me out to be an intellectuial

    snob seems somehow inappropriate, especially for someone new to this

    Forum.

    JVK

  13. #13
    Full Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Arlington Heights, IL
    Posts
    152
    Rep Power
    7071

    Default

    How about this?

    After sex, production of the hormone prolactin surges. This in turn causes

    stem cells in the brain to develop new neurons in the brain's olfactory bulb, its smell

    center.

    "But I like it, I love it, I want some more of it,
    I try so hard, I can't rise above

    it.
    Don't know what it is 'bout that little gal's lovin',
    But I like it, I love it, I want some more of

    it."

  14. #14
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    23
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    I was thinking people can

    extrapolate indicators of higher testosterone/estrogen (and, proportional pheromone output from things like skin

    tone, size of breasts, etc.) based on what they have already come across. But what about totally new features like

    round nose vs pointy nose, or high eyebrows vs low.. how would the landlocked tribesman/woman know 'this chick/guy

    has to have some awesome pheromones'?

    Quote Originally Posted by jvkohl
    I made no such assumption. Perhaps you assumed that you

    knew enough about conditioning to ask "new" questions. If my response seemed terse, it's because I've answered the

    same questions many times
    It's not at all because your

    responses were terse... on the contrary, it's because you asked questions like "What don't you understand

    regarding the ability of pheromones to condition the response to a picture? Ever see a picture advertisement for

    food that made you want the food?" Didn't say or imply my question was new, just wanted to make it clear that you

    misinterpreted it the first time.

    I was considering other things, like how you say pheromones are used to

    transmit signals regarding reproductive fitness. What about visual indicators of reproductive fitness itself... dont

    they play a role, totally bypassing the use of pheromones?

    Like, I wouldn't be turned on by a fat woman even if

    she was emitting a tub's worth of the most ass-kicking pheromones out there. There's no way I can be conditioned

    into wanting to have sex with such a chick, simply because they cant be as good at it. Ages ago, when the norm was

    for women to be underweight, and those who weighed a little more than average were 'fit' or 'normal', a guy

    preferred these women knowing that they wouldnt faint before he reaches an orgasm.

    To be fair, the same is true

    for women. They probably dont prefer men with thick penises just because they've sniffed enough naked guys to know

    that size correlates with pheromone output... the more plausible explanation is that i perform better in bed, and

    that the extra surface area increases the sensation of pleasure during sex.

    I'm sure none of these points are

    new, since I'm just restating what most others say in other threads (even here).. that pheromones dont seem to be

    the only route to sexual attraction and cant be used to explain all of it.

  15. #15
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    I'm sure none

    of these points are new, since I'm just restating what most others say in other threads (even here).. that

    pheromones dont seem to be the only route to sexual attraction and cant be used to explain all of

    it.
    Quite the contrary; there's no other biologically based explanation other than pheromones. Those

    who think that there are other routes should begin to detail them; provide a mammalian model for some inclination of

    another route (non-olfactory); clue us in to innate sexual dimorphism in the sensory system involved, detail a link

    from the sensory input to a neuroendocrine response, and it would help if the model incorporated developmental

    staging.

    Instead, what I continue to read about visual or other aspects of physical attraction is that it

    just happens. So, I continue to ask, how does it happen in homosexuals? Humans are more visual creatures--just

    doesn't cut it for any of the behavioral development specialists that I know. Feel free to believe whatever you

    like, but don't read my book or technical papers because you won't find any support for the belief that attraction

    is not fully dependent on olfactory-genetic-neuronal-
    hormonal-behavioral reciprocity.

    Earlier I posted

    links to two more journal articles in the Research section. A co-author on one of the articles (i.e., Linda Buck)

    shared the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physiology and/or Medicine with Richard Axel, whose lab links to . Such

    things mean little to those whose belief in the visual primacy of human physical attraction is based on nothing but

    psychobabble. Why bother to read anything that doesn't support your current belief--including my posts to this

    Forum?

    Just continue to assert that pheromones aren't the only route; it's a more popular position to

    take, regardless of the fact that there is no biological basis for the

    position.

    JVK

  16. #16
    Kodachrome Forever! Gegogi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Lost
    Posts
    2,708
    Rep Power
    7643

    Default

    I don't think anyone disagrees

    that at it's most primordial, attraction has a biological basis. And pheromones are at the heart of that process.

    Nevertheless, biological urges still must intermingle with the social and intellectual aspects of human existence.

    Pouring a bottle of SOE on a loser will not a Casanova make.

    Why are some women attracted to withered but

    rich old men? It's not their pleasing visual appearance or their virile pheromone signature. Well, the abstract

    concept of lust for money and power doesn't fit well into a biological model does it? At a lower level, hookers

    have sex with anyone willing to pay their fee. Other women are attracted to and marry convicts with lifetime

    sentences based on letters and phone calls. They know there is little or no chance of actual physical contact.

    Groupies follow rockstars from city to city hoping for a chance union. They haven't been near enough to even catch

    a hint of their pheromone signature.

    My point is human attraction is multifaceted. That is, the intermingling

    of the biological (real or imagined), visual, social and intellectual. To reduce human attraction to a purely

    biological or visual basis is misleading.
    "I'm just a dirty hornytoad" -Gegogi

  17. #17
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gegogi
    My point is human

    attraction is multifaceted. That is, the intermingling of the biological (real or imagined), visual, social and

    intellectual. To reduce human attraction to a purely biological or visual basis is misleading.
    My

    point is that the only means by which the visual, social and intellectual environment can biologically interact with

    behavior, is via a neuroendocrine (e.g., hormone) response. Pheromones directly elicit this neuroendocrine response;

    no other sensory input from the social environment does this.

    To complicate the biological facts with

    scenarios that are purely functions of socialization is misleading. Our sexual behavior, when reduced to its lowest

    common denominator, is based upon the interaction of olfaction with hormones--as sexual behavior is in all mammals.

    I use a mammalian model; you use no model.

    If you want to debate a reductionist approach (e.g., ask me to

    explain why this or that happens), at least offer some common ground. Let's compare

    models.

    JVK

  18. #18
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Posts
    12
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    I think that pheromones do play an

    important role but what differs human beeings from other animals is that they are much more complex and that there

    are much more other factors. Especially beauty itself does seem to play an important role -more important than

    pheromones.

    To constate my opinion I'd like to show you an interesting article from: Social Psychologie, Brehm

    et. all, 5th edition, New York 2002, S.309:

    "A source of evidence for the view that beauty is an objective

    quality is that babies who are too young to have to have learned the culture's standarts of beauty

    exhibit a nonverbal preference for faces considered attractive by adults. Picture the scene in an infant laboratory:

    A baby, lying on its back in a crib, is shown a series of faces previously rated by college students. The first face

    appears and a clock starts ticking as the baby stars at it. As soon as the baby looks away, the clock stops and

    the next face is presented. The result: young infants spend more time looking at attractive faces than

    unattractive ones -regardless of whether the faces are young or old, male or
    female, or black or white.

    Other studies showed the same"

    Babies without any sexuality are more attractes by good looking fathes rather

    than by ordinary looking faces.
    So beauty seems to be something that can cause arousal or attraction by itself.



    I really do think that pheromones do play an important role but luckily there are (in my opinion) many other

    factors beyond them. I think that's one big aspekt what differs human beeings from animals that relationships and

    arousal go beyond the evolutionry perspective.

  19. #19
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by mavo
    Babies without any

    sexuality are more attractes by good looking fathes rather than by ordinary looking faces.
    So beauty seems to be

    something that can cause arousal or attraction by itself.
    This type of baby study offers no

    explanation for how one face becomes more attractive than another: male/female, black/white, symmetrical or

    asymmetrical; big nose/small nose, whatever. What do you think is being measured when an infant spends more time

    looking at one face than another? What makes anyone think that its linked to attractive facial features, when the

    attraction is based upon adult responses?

    Like many psychological studies, there is no mammalian model for

    face preference (though some sheep studies present comparable, yet ridiculous, findings). In contrast,

    hormone-dependent pheromone production correlates well with attractive facial features. All infants are exposed to,

    and respond to pheromones before they can focus on faces, or facial expression. This brings in a developmental

    staging effect that is absent in the baby studies of facial attraction. It is also consistent with a mammalian model

    (e.g., sheep rely on olfactory cues for mate choice--even homosexual sheep).

    Leave out the need for a

    mammalian model and leave out developmental staging and you can have lots of findings that suggest something is

    going on other than a response to pheromones. But use biological logic, and you'll get back to the primacy of

    pheromones.

    JVK

  20. #20
    Banned User
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Fircrest, WA
    Posts
    82
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jvkohl
    The human

    vomeronasal organ presence and function is a dead issue--debated to no end. It is not required to process pheromones

    in humans and in several other species. Male children who are anosmic (no sense of smell) from birth were reported

    to exhibit emotional apathy, have no interest in dating, etc--or more simply put "they don't fall in love."





    Anosmia from birth means the animal will show no sexual interest.



    Explained below



    What don't

    you understand regarding the ability of pheromones to condition the response to a picture? Ever see a picture

    advertisement for food that made you want the food? It's the chemical appeal of the food that makes it look good;

    it's the chemical appeal of people that makes them look good--whether or not the food or the person is physically

    there.



    You could forget everything you read or think you know about the VNO; pheromones elicit a hormone

    response which explains their effect on behavior. Unconscious affect=the hormone response; the hormone response

    effects behavior.

    Thanks for your interest; it would help you to read my book.



    JVK
    Actually JV, I got the same impression

    the other guy did. It's not what you said, it's how you said it. And not just in this post.

    I think your too

    blunt to have too many friends here with the exception of the respect people have for your knowledge and profession.

    That and the fact you come off like you take the intellectual highground wich comes off very condescending.

    Take

    a stab at diplomacy and etiquette. You know so much about pheromones and human behavior, it shouldn't be hard to

    pick up on word patterns that amount to social manners that would also obviously affect human behavior.

    Send me

    a sample of your pheremones, that way when I enter scent range of you or someone like you, I'll know if they're

    enemy or not without having to remember them.

    Ryan

  21. #21
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Kardz
    I think your too

    blunt to have too many friends here with the exception of the respect people have for your knowledge and profession.

    That and the fact you come off like you take the intellectual highground wich comes off very

    condescending.
    Good points. Let me explain a bit. I've been a Forum participant for several years.

    Every so often, someone comes on with the attitude that "it's not just pheromones; can't just be conditioning" or

    some other comment in reference to what I've said/written. In nearly every case, they fail to understand what I've

    said/written, but without looking further (past posts, reading my book) they tell me how they "think" it is, or that

    it's much more complicated than I think it is. Nothing else. No background info, no mammalian model, no biology, no

    developmental staging... In any case, it's always more complicated that I make it out to be.

    Quote Originally Posted by Kardz


    Take a stab at diplomacy and etiquette. You know so much about pheromones and human behavior, it shouldn't be

    hard to pick up on word patterns that amount to social manners that would also obviously affect human

    behavior.
    I used diplomacy and etiquette for many years--until my model was validated and

    accepted by most of my colleagues. I wrote an entire book for a general audience that was well-received and got many

    good reviews from other authorities. I've debated with other authorities things like the baby study results--and

    the other authorities know that babies can identify their mother's scent within a few hours of birth--and that

    visual perception is not nearly as acute or specific.

    Then, someone who uses no diplomacy or etiquette,

    offers the Forum an example of something that they think can't be explained by pheromones. No need to read my book,

    or any other writings (mine or by others). Just tell me how it is. Sometimes this irritates me more than usual.

    Sometimes I want to limit my involvement in the discussion, and so, sometimes I'm not diplomatic. I don't know how

    to be diplomatic with someone who has so little interest in human pheromones that they won't inform themselves a

    bit before commenting on what I've said. And so, I'm blunt, or maybe I take the intellectual high ground--as a

    means to show them they need to learn more to debate the topic with me. Hasn't stopped anyone, yet.

    I might

    be better off just ignoring the posts that try to tell me how it is, rather than become indignant. But my

    participation in this Forum, means that I can't ignore all the posts, and I can only advocate that others read my

    book once in a while--not in response to every post. Clearly, there are many people whose interest in pheromones

    does not extend much beyond the Forum postings. Those are not the people that I am addressing my comments to. I try

    to interest people in looking beyond what they think they know, and hope they will learn something new. Most don't.

    Those that do learn, don't try to tell me how sexual attraction works--they know, I know.

    For those who

    don't read any books, my domain provides plenty of information--more than enough for anyone to figure out that we

    are not primarily visual creatures; we follow the same biologically driven mammalian model as other species

    follow--if mammalian sexual behavior is driven by visual input ours would be too. Mammalian sexual behavior is

    driven by olfactory input; so is ours.

    JVK

  22. #22
    Kodachrome Forever! Gegogi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Lost
    Posts
    2,708
    Rep Power
    7643

    Default

    JVK comments, "To

    complicate the biological facts with scenarios that are purely functions of socialization is misleading. Our sexual

    behavior, when reduced to its lowest common denominator, is based upon the interaction of olfaction with

    hormones--as sexual behavior is in all mammals. I use a mammalian model; you use no model."
    First, the

    main focus of this forum is hands-on advice for artifical pheromone users. We crave information useful in our daily

    endeavors, e.g., making friends, business contacts and getting laid. Therefore, information presented here is viewed

    in the light of said application and not for scientific appreciation.

    Furthermore, you may note in my above

    post I did, in fact, agree with you that "our sexual behavior, when reduced to its lowest common denominator, is

    based upon the interaction of olfaction with hormones..." I merely pointed out that human socialization can and oft

    does circumvent the biological process, a painful lesson many young men learn while using artifical pheromones. In

    other words, a few dabs of NPA doesn't break down social barriers as effectively as it may elicit an neuroendocrine

    response. Artifical pheromones may make her want to jump your bones but it won't override the color of your skin,

    religion or socioeconomic level. It that light, my statements are not misleading. They are practical reality for the

    man in the street.
    "I'm just a dirty hornytoad" -Gegogi

  23. #23
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gegogi
    First, the main focus

    of this forum is hands-on advice for artifical pheromone users. We crave information useful in our daily endeavors,

    e.g., making friends, business contacts and getting laid. Therefore, information presented here is viewed in the

    light of said application and not for scientific appreciation.
    Good point. I'm not really

    considering the purpose of the Forum when I post, or respond to a post. What I tend to consider most important is

    dissemination of factual information, as opposed to opinions. The Forum is a good place to exchange opinions. Yet,

    when I read an unsubstantiated opinion, my reaction is to challenge it without concern for

    context.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gegogi
    Furthermore, you may note in my above post I did, in fact, agree with you that

    "our sexual behavior, when reduced to its lowest common denominator, is based upon the interaction of olfaction with

    hormones..." I merely pointed out that human socialization can and oft does circumvent the biological process, a

    painful lesson many young men learn while using artifical pheromones.
    If a young man must learn this

    lesson from the use of artificial pheromones, he's pretty far gone from reality. Granted, marketing claims for some

    products indicate they're "guarenteed to get you laid," but I don't recall seeing such claims on the Love-Scent

    site. So, I don't feel the need to offer up the obvious fact that socialization can/does circumvent the biological

    process. Only a fool would think otherwise.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gegogi
    In other words, a few dabs of NPA doesn't

    break down social barriers as effectively as it may elicit an neuroendocrine response. Artifical pheromones may make

    her want to jump your bones but it won't override the color of your skin, religion or socioeconomic level. It that

    light, my statements are not misleading. They are practical reality for the man in the street.
    Which

    man in the street do you think isn't aware of these facts. More likely is that they deal with them on a day to day

    basis, but are unfamiliar with any factual representation of the biological basis for human sexual

    behavior.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gegogi from a previous post
    Why are some women attracted to withered but rich old men?

    It's not their pleasing visual appearance or their virile pheromone signature. Well, the abstract concept of lust

    for money and power doesn't fit well into a biological model does it? At a lower level, hookers have sex with

    anyone willing to pay their fee. Other women are attracted to and marry convicts with lifetime sentences based on

    letters and phone calls. They know there is little or no chance of actual physical contact. Groupies follow

    rockstars from city to city hoping for a chance union. They haven't been near enough to even catch a hint of their

    pheromone signature.
    In each of your scenarios above, you ignore the fact that pheromones condition

    the visual response. For example: this is why women (most of them) are attracted to men--not just withered but rich

    old men (which is more a function of socialization). Lust for money and power do fit into a biological model: the

    model of provisioning. Again, however, there must be a more basic model for the attraction that comes before one is

    in a position to provision or to be provided for. Physical contact is no longer required once the sexual response

    has been conditioned to pheromones, but you don't seem to acknowledge this. Instead you offer comments that ignore

    the biological basis for women fixating on prisoners or following rock stars.

    If others can freely ignore

    biology, why should I not freely ignore socialization? Making a point here--I understand your acknowledgement of the

    biological basis. Still, in the scenarios you offer--the biology is gone, as if it were never there in the first

    place. And pheromones are part of the biology that is there in the first place. Olfactory communication is first and

    foremost in the lives of all mammals. Drawing only from one species in an attempt to downplay the role of biology

    seems somehow inappropriate to me. Might be better if more people learn/acknowledge what pheromones can do, and the

    role that they play in all socialized scenarios.

    JVK

  24. #24
    Banned User
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Fircrest, WA
    Posts
    82
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jvkohl
    Good points. Let me

    explain a bit. I've been a Forum participant for several years. Every so often, someone comes on with the attitude

    that "it's not just pheromones; can't just be conditioning" or some other comment in reference to what I've

    said/written. In nearly every case, they fail to understand what I've said/written, but without looking further

    (past posts, reading my book) they tell me how they "think" it is, or that it's much more complicated than I think

    it is. Nothing else. No background info, no mammalian model, no biology, no developmental staging... In any case,

    it's always more complicated that I make it out to be.



    I used diplomacy and etiquette for many

    years--until my model was validated and accepted by most of my colleagues. I wrote an entire book for a general

    audience that was well-received and got many good reviews from other authorities. I've debated with other

    authorities things like the baby study results--and the other authorities know that babies can identify their

    mother's scent within a few hours of birth--and that visual perception is not nearly as acute or specific.



    Then, someone who uses no diplomacy or etiquette, offers the Forum an example of something that they think can't

    be explained by pheromones. No need to read my book, or any other writings (mine or by others). Just tell me how it

    is. Sometimes this irritates me more than usual. Sometimes I want to limit my involvement in the discussion, and so,

    sometimes I'm not diplomatic. I don't know how to be diplomatic with someone who has so little interest in human

    pheromones that they won't inform themselves a bit before commenting on what I've said. And so, I'm blunt, or

    maybe I take the intellectual high ground--as a means to show them they need to learn more to debate the topic with

    me. Hasn't stopped anyone, yet.

    I might be better off just ignoring the posts that try to tell me how it is,

    rather than become indignant. But my participation in this Forum, means that I can't ignore all the posts, and I

    can only advocate that others read my book once in a while--not in response to every post. Clearly, there are many

    people whose interest in pheromones does not extend much beyond the Forum postings. Those are not the people that I

    am addressing my comments to. I try to interest people in looking beyond what they think they know, and hope they

    will learn something new. Most don't. Those that do learn, don't try to tell me how sexual attraction works--they

    know, I know.

    For those who don't read any books, my domain provides plenty of information--more than enough

    for anyone to figure out that we are not primarily visual creatures; we follow the same biologically driven

    mammalian model as other species follow--if mammalian sexual behavior is driven by visual input ours would be too.

    Mammalian sexual behavior is driven by olfactory input; so is ours.



    JVK
    You talk and act like you're dealing

    with people that are clinical scientists like yourself, or people who have atleast gone to school or studied this

    stuff long term.

    You don't at all act like or keep in mind people here are your average joe, or a few steps

    above that.

    And furthermore, you act like they're completely ignorant when they obviously haven't studied

    pheremones more than a few weeks or months. They are in comparison to you--myself included, but there's no reason

    to ever show that if you choose to post and reply to these types of people.

    People here develop their own

    perceptions and facts weather they're true or not, just as you have. Although yours are obviously broken down into

    a deep level of science, and you've obviously been studying this stuff for years or decades whereas probably noone

    here has atleast in anywhere near the time you've got logged.

    And with all of this in mind, i'm sure, you

    still don't get it.

    Loosely, this entire community is your average jane and joe. And you act like this isn't

    going to happen. That people aren't going to list their own findings in a less than desirable way and challenge

    what you have to say.

    Do you think your average joe is going to spend months or years researching,

    experimenting, developing models, and concluding like you?

    By comparison you argue this stuff to us like a

    college grad could be arguing the finer points of trig to a gradeschool student.

    It's 100% redundant, and with

    all of your intellect i'm not sure why you bother the way you do it.

    You of all people are experts on human

    behavior, don't you think the way you do it is not at all the best way? Don't you think your obvious tone in your

    posts is going to close people's minds to you?

    Speaking of closed minds, weather your right or not--you post

    and reply and state your infinite knowledge on the topic as the end all, be all.

    A good scientist is always open

    minded, open to other possibilities. Pheremones are just one of the MANY dynamics of human behavior from any one of

    our 5 senses. It's a small piece of the pie in the grand scheme of things.

    But weather you know your right or

    not, I don't think your going to win much respect doing that. And it's an attitude and a mindset you need to shake

    if your going to deal with people that aren't at a comparable level as you in the pheremone world.

    That's not

    to say we can't benefit from your knowledge, because you've obviously got alot to offer. And i'm sure plenty of

    people see that. But I can guarantee alot of people aren't going to be nearly as open minded until you get rid of

    the supremacy attitude and come down to our level and our social standards. THAT is how you reach people.

    Not

    by acting like your all-knowing and arguing the finer points of pheremones with your fellow scientists on a 50foot

    yacht off the coast of australia to some rich retard over cocktails.

    There's really no point otherwise.



    Ryan
    Last edited by belgareth; 11-24-2005 at 04:14 AM.

  25. #25
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Kardz
    A good scientist

    is always open minded, open to other possibilities. Pheremones are just one of the MANY dynamics of human behavior

    from any one of our 5 senses. It's a small piece of the pie in the grand scheme of things.
    Thanks

    for your opinion. It's settled then, pheromones don't matter much in YOUR grand scheme of things; pheromones are

    the basis of my grand scheme of things.

    JVK

  26. #26
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    23
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jvkohl
    Quite the

    contrary; there's no other biologically based explanation other than pheromones. Those who think that there are

    other routes should begin to detail them; provide a mammalian model for some inclination of another route

    (non-olfactory); clue us in to innate sexual dimorphism in the sensory system involved, detail a link from the

    sensory input to a neuroendocrine response, and it would help if the model incorporated developmental

    staging.
    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    I was considering other things, like how you say pheromones are used to

    transmit signals regarding reproductive fitness. What about visual indicators of reproductive fitness itself... dont

    they play a role, totally bypassing the use of pheromones?
    There are other biologically based

    explanations. Fortunately, visual indicators, like the appearance of actual reproductive fitness, play a major role.

    Sure, these phenomena may CORRELATE to natural pheromone levels, but they dont necessarily rely on them. For

    example, human pheromones cant produce sexual attraction for someone that lacks gender, or for a non-human.

    You

    accuse me of ignoring all your evidence (at least I read all of your posts, entirely), yet you completely

    disregarded the second half of my last post.

  27. #27
    Banned User jvkohl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Location
    Northern Georgia
    Posts
    1,127
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    There are other

    biologically based explanations.
    Name one, or provide a few details about how non-olfactory sensory

    input from the social environment influences hormones and behavior. I'd even accept an explanation of how birds

    become visually attracted to features in other birds--like the peacock's tail. Where's the connection to hormones,

    and to behavior.

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    Fortunately, visual indicators, like the appearance of actual reproductive

    fitness, play a major role. Sure, these phenomena may CORRELATE to natural pheromone levels, but they dont

    necessarily rely on them.
    Visual indicators of reproductive fitness not only correlate with pheromone

    production and distribution, but must rely on pheromone production and distribution to become visual indicators. If

    you think that visual indicators don't rely on pheromone production and distribution, then it is time to tell me

    how these visual indicators develop to become visual indicators. There is no biological explanation--either

    researchers say "it's just so" or they offer no explanation. The peacocks tail is attractive to peahens--a "just

    so" story. Have you ever read anything that offers the foggiest details on how this happens. A visual

    template--perhaps. Then where is the link to a hormone response from this visual template?

    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero

    For example, human pheromones cant produce sexual attraction for someone that lacks gender, or for a

    non-human.
    So, what sensory input does produce sexual attraction in someone who lacks gender? Human

    pheromones do elicit cross species reactions (reactions in non-humans). What makes you think that a male dog is

    humping a woman's leg because he finds her visually appealing? Clearly it's her pheromones. I've written

    extensively on these cross-species attractions. Why do you think you can just say they don't exist?



    Quote Originally Posted by pherohero
    You accuse me of ignoring all your evidence (at least I read all of your posts, entirely), yet

    you completely disregarded the second half of my last post.
    If you continue to insist that it's not

    pheromones, I will continue to ignore most of your posts. It's time to give me more information on what you think

    is happening and how it is happening.

    JVK

  28. #28
    Kodachrome Forever! Gegogi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Lost
    Posts
    2,708
    Rep Power
    7643

    Default

    What makes you think that

    a male dog is humping a woman's leg because he finds her visually appealing? Clearly it's her

    pheromones.
    Maybe the dog knows something's up and the BF should quickly follow suit and make babies!

    I've been around bitches in heat many times and, fortunately, didn't get horny. However, when I was a kid a dog

    ambled up to me and peed on my leg. I'm not sure if I had the appearance of a tree or fire hydrant, or I lacked

    pheromones to signal I was in fact a mammal and not a territorial marker.
    "I'm just a dirty hornytoad" -Gegogi

  29. #29
    Phero Guru Rbt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Midwest US
    Posts
    1,579
    Rep Power
    7226

    Default

    I have a quick question concerning

    that baby and face study, and I'm hoping those of you who have cited it can answer this so I don't have to take my

    own limited time to dig out the answer.

    In all the pictures that were shown to the babies, did those pictures

    include the baby's parents? Could there be a possibility of a link between the parent's pheromone signatures and

    the baby's "image" preferences? I'm thinking baby might link the positive "feelings" (food, protection, comfort)

    with the parents, both in terms of odors and visual perception. What would if mean, if anything, if said baby

    reacted well or poorly to it's mother's photo?

    PS And us Mensa folks can be "stupid" too...
    The opposite of love isn't hate.
    It's apathy
    .

  30. #30
    Stranger
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Posts
    12
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Hi Rbt,

    they showed them

    pictures across many different cultures especially North Americans and Europeans. No pictures of there parents.



    American college students were shown the same pictures.

    Exactly the pictures which were rated to be very

    attractive by the students got much more attention by the babies (they spendet much more time starring at them).



    The interesting think is (as this study took place in the U.S.- and most of this babies didn't have any contact

    to Europeans so far in their short lives) that the babies even starred longer to good looking Europeans (even though

    they were never exposed to Europeans and their pheromones)

    Many scientists share the oppinion that perceptions

    of facial beauty are largely consistent across cultures. Those regarded as good-looking in one culture also tend to

    be judged as attractive by people from other cultures -even without any contact to this other culture and their

    special pheromon signature.

Page 1 of 2 1 ... LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 2 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 2 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Lecture on Pheromones by James Kohl (cassette)
    By Bruce in forum Pheromone Discussion
    Replies: 15
    Last Post: 04-14-2003, 06:27 AM
  2. James V Kohl = stranger?????
    By MaxiMog in forum STORE and Forum Questions/Problems
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 08-01-2002, 01:11 AM
  3. Replies: 14
    Last Post: 04-02-2002, 09:04 PM
  4. Question for James V. Kohl
    By jvkohl in forum Archives 1
    Replies: 40
    Last Post: 03-15-2002, 11:01 PM
  5. Pheromone question for James Kohl
    By **DONOTDELETE** in forum Archives 1
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 01-17-2002, 10:25 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •