How to be happy though human / by W. Béran Wolfe.
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savage and civilized communities share a common
denominator of social responsibility. Just as in the case
of work, the sexual problem is a matter whose solution
cannot be left to individual caprice. Every unsocial sexual
relation affects not only the individuals involved but also
their neighbours and their progeny. Were it not for this
fact we should not have such complicated mores respecting
the sex relations. Incest, child-marriage, rape, and homo¬
sexuality would not bear the stigma of social taboo were
it not for the fact that these forms of sexual union are
subversive of the social good because they are socially
irresponsible. Marriage and the foundation of the
family and the assumption of its complicated obligations
and responsibilities, or the preparation for this solution,
remain, with work and social adjustment, fundamental
techniques in the art of being human. And here too the
converse is true—the unmarried individual, with rare
exceptions, falls short of human security and happiness.
Let us review briefly the basic data of this chapter.
You have seen that the human being is an organism
especially weak and poorly adapted for life in this world.
You have seen, furthermore, that the period of dependence
of the human infant is relatively longer than that of the
young of any other animal. You have learned that a child’s
brain grows faster than his body ; and for this reason a
child is the only living organism that experiences his own
deficiencies. You have found that for these three
important biological reasons every human being falls
heir to a feeling of inferiority. This feeling of inferiority
has been compensated for by nature by means of the com¬
plicated and many-sided adjustments of social life. You
have learned, moreover, that to be a complete and
effective human being you must affirm the pattern of
human compensations, that is, that you must accept as
many of the bonds of human relationship as possible in
order to be secure and happy in your humanity. We have
shown that in order to gain this sense of security, totality,
and happiness you must take a definite attitude toward
the problems of work and of sex, and solve these problems