NoFap (Italian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "NoFap" in Italian language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Italian rank
1st place
1st place
3rd place
14th place
799th place
22nd place
2nd place
7th place
5th place
26th place
low place
low place
965th place
2,934th place
4,963rd place
325th place
1,082nd place
1,108th place
4th place
9th place
1,765th place
3,861st place
456th place
848th place
low place
2,254th place
low place
low place
1,824th place
6,811th place
low place
low place
269th place
570th place
140th place
340th place
20th place
52nd place
low place
low place
109th place
257th place
3,322nd place
low place
26th place
118th place
346th place
519th place
2,186th place
7,840th place
1,544th place
1,488th place

bbc.com

  • Anisa Subedar, The online groups of men who avoid masturbation, in BBC News, BBC, 24 giugno 2017. URL consultato il 23 settembre 2017.
    «NoFap' is an organisation that supports its users regardless of what their goals might be as long as they're trying to improve their sexual health and live their sexual habits in a way that they want to," he says, pointing out that abstinence is not the ultimate aim of all participants. "We don't have a unified goal. Some people want to masturbate some people don't want to masturbate - it hosts a wide variety of people with different viewpoints.»

books.google.com

  • Dennis Coon e John O. Mitterer, 11. Gender and Sexuality, in Introduction to Psychology: Gateways to Mind and Behavior, 14ª ed., Cengage Learning, 2014, p. 363, ISBN 978-1-305-54500-7.
    «Is there any way that masturbation can cause harm? Seventy years ago, a child might have been told that masturbation would cause insanity, acne, sterility, or other such nonsense. "Self-abuse," as it was then called, has enjoyed a long and unfortunate history of religious and medical disapproval (Caroll, 2013). The modern view is that masturbation is a normal sexual behavior (Hogarth & Ingham, 2009). Enlightened parents are well aware of this fact. Still, many children are punished or made to feel guilty for touching their genitals. This is unfortunate because masturbation itself is harmless. Typically, its only negative effects are feelings of fear, guilt, or anxiety that arise from learning to think of masturbation as "bad" or "wrong." In an age when people are urged to practice "safer sex", masturbation remains the safest sex of all.»
  • David J. Ley, The Myth of Sex Addiction, Rowman & Littlefield, 10 luglio 2014, p. 12, ISBN 978-1-4422-1305-0.
  • Donald S. Strassberg, Julia E. Mackaronis e Michael A. Perelman, Sexual dysfunctions, in Oxford textbook of psychopathology, Third, NY, Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 441–442, ISBN 978-0-19-981177-9, OCLC 879552995.
  • Dennis Coon, John O. Mitterer e Tanya S. Martini, Psychology: Modules for Active Learning, Cengage Learning, 5 dicembre 2016, pp. 413–414, ISBN 978-1-337-51708-9.

businessinsider.com

christianpost.com

doi.org

dx.doi.org

guidesify.com

heinonline.org

huffingtonpost.com

invinciblestate.com

jstor.org

  • Lisa Z. Sigel, Masturbation: The History of the Great Terror by Jean Stengers; Ann Van Neck; Kathryn Hoffmann, in Journal of Social History, vol. 37, n. 4, Summer 2004, pp. 1065–1066, DOI:10.1353/jsh.2004.0065, ISSN 0022-4529 (WC · ACNP), JSTOR 3790078.
    «Stengers and Van Neck follow the illness to its fairly abrupt demise; they liken the shift to finally seeing the emperor without clothes as doctors began to doubt masturbation as a cause of illness at the turn of the twentieth century. Once doubt set in, scientists began to accumulate statistics about the practice, finding that a large minority and then a large majority of people masturbated. The implications were clear: if most people masturbated and did not experience insanity, debility, and early death, then masturbation could not be held accountable to the etiology that had been assigned it. Masturbation quickly lost its hold over the medical community, and parents followed in making masturbation an ordinary part of first childhood and then human sexuality.»

lifesitenews.com

macleans.ca

neonnettle.com

newsweek.com

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

nymag.com

oadoi.org

psychologytoday.com

reason.com

reddit.com

salon.com

theaustralian.com.au

thevision.com

unibo.it

acnpsearch.unibo.it

  • Lisa Z. Sigel, Masturbation: The History of the Great Terror by Jean Stengers; Ann Van Neck; Kathryn Hoffmann, in Journal of Social History, vol. 37, n. 4, Summer 2004, pp. 1065–1066, DOI:10.1353/jsh.2004.0065, ISSN 0022-4529 (WC · ACNP), JSTOR 3790078.
    «Stengers and Van Neck follow the illness to its fairly abrupt demise; they liken the shift to finally seeing the emperor without clothes as doctors began to doubt masturbation as a cause of illness at the turn of the twentieth century. Once doubt set in, scientists began to accumulate statistics about the practice, finding that a large minority and then a large majority of people masturbated. The implications were clear: if most people masturbated and did not experience insanity, debility, and early death, then masturbation could not be held accountable to the etiology that had been assigned it. Masturbation quickly lost its hold over the medical community, and parents followed in making masturbation an ordinary part of first childhood and then human sexuality.»
  • Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Masturbation: From myth to sexual health, in Contemporary Sexuality, vol. 37, n. 3, marzo 2003, p. v, ISSN 1094-5725 (WC · ACNP), OCLC 37229308.
    «Finally, the American medical community pronounced masturbation as normal in 1972 American Medical Association publication, Human Sexuality (Rowan, 2000).»

web.archive.org

worldcat.org

  • Lisa Z. Sigel, Masturbation: The History of the Great Terror by Jean Stengers; Ann Van Neck; Kathryn Hoffmann, in Journal of Social History, vol. 37, n. 4, Summer 2004, pp. 1065–1066, DOI:10.1353/jsh.2004.0065, ISSN 0022-4529 (WC · ACNP), JSTOR 3790078.
    «Stengers and Van Neck follow the illness to its fairly abrupt demise; they liken the shift to finally seeing the emperor without clothes as doctors began to doubt masturbation as a cause of illness at the turn of the twentieth century. Once doubt set in, scientists began to accumulate statistics about the practice, finding that a large minority and then a large majority of people masturbated. The implications were clear: if most people masturbated and did not experience insanity, debility, and early death, then masturbation could not be held accountable to the etiology that had been assigned it. Masturbation quickly lost its hold over the medical community, and parents followed in making masturbation an ordinary part of first childhood and then human sexuality.»
  • Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Masturbation: From myth to sexual health, in Contemporary Sexuality, vol. 37, n. 3, marzo 2003, p. v, ISSN 1094-5725 (WC · ACNP), OCLC 37229308.
    «Finally, the American medical community pronounced masturbation as normal in 1972 American Medical Association publication, Human Sexuality (Rowan, 2000).»
  • Donald S. Strassberg, Julia E. Mackaronis e Michael A. Perelman, Sexual dysfunctions, in Oxford textbook of psychopathology, Third, NY, Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 441–442, ISBN 978-0-19-981177-9, OCLC 879552995.