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Incredibly, Victorian physicians practiced gynecology and urology on women without looking. Even a catheter insertion would typically be done blind, with the doctor’s hands under the sheets and his gaze heading off in some polite middle distance. Fortunately, budding M.D.’s were allowed to look upon—and rehearse upon—cadaver genitals, and that is how they learned to practice the Braille edition of their craft.
Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex
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