Posted by Luigi Donatello Asero on 12/20/05 02:21
"Luigi Donatello Asero" <jaggillarfotboll@telia.com> skrev i meddelandet
news:zGGpf.152631$dP1.510259@newsc.telia.net...
>
> "dorayme" <doraymeRIDTHIS@optusnet.com.au> skrev i meddelandet
> news:doraymeRIDTHIS-E36B0D.09292120122005@news-vip.optusnet.com.au...
> > In article <2mqpf.152605$dP1.509778@newsc.telia.net>,
> > "Luigi Donatello Asero" <jaggillarfotboll@telia.com> wrote:
> >
> > > > you could choose a partner who smells good for you but does not look
> good
> > > > according to your standards and viceversa.
> > >
> >
> > I am working on a program that can include smells in web pages.
> > and as attachments to emails. Spartanicus and others will give
> > advice about not embedding such smells but making them optional
> > and leaving it to the smeller to decide if he or she wants to
> > smell such and at what intensity. In a way, this is just a
> > development of your own thesis that freedom is very important.
>
> Yes, it is a development somehow but it is something which I have thought
> for quite a long time.
> However many of us might be attracted by certain scents unconsciously,
if
> these have a low intensity.
> Does the program work with scents?
> Do you like cats?
> Did you observe their behaviour?
> --
> Luigi Donatello Asero
> https://www.scaiecat-spa-gigi.com/sv/boende-i-italien.php
I might add that scents perhaps work on the ground of genetical
compatibility
(people of the same group should be less attracted among each other)
But I think that there are several theories about how scents affect our
sexual life.
See
http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/pto-1174.html
--
Luigi Donatello Asero
https://www.scaiecat-spa-gigi.com/sv/faktaomitalien.php
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