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- Preface - Introduction
- Chapter I - Chapter II - Chapter III - Chapter IV - Chapter V
- Chapter I - Chapter II - Chapter III - Chapter IV - Chapter V - Chapter VI - Chapter VII - Chapter VIII - Chapter IX - Chapter X
- Chapter I - Chapter II - Chapter III - Chapter IV - Chapter V
- Chapter I - Chapter II
- Chapter I - Chapter II - Chapter III - Chapter IV - Chapter V - Chapter VI
- Introductory Remarks - Chapter I - Chapter II - Chapter III - Chapter IV - Chapter V - Chapter VI
- Chapter I - Chapter II
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CHAPTER I
Vatsya says that this is so, because the ways of working as well as the consciousness of pleasure in men and women are different. The difference in the ways of working, by which men are the actors, and women are the persons acted upon, is owing to the nature of the male and the female, otherwise the actor would be sometimes the person acted upon, and vice versa. And from this difference in the ways of working follows the difference in the consciousness of pleasure, for a man thinks, `this woman is united with me', and a woman thinks, `I am united with this man'. It may be said that, if the ways of working in men and women are different, why should not there be a difference, even in the pleasure they feel, and which is the result of those ways. But this objection is groundless, for, the person acting and the person acted upon being of different kinds, there is a reason for the difference in their ways of working; but there is no reason for any difference in the pleasure they feel, because they both naturally derive pleasure from the act they perform.3
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