TIME EUROPE APRIL 24, 2000 VOL. 155 NO. 16
COVER STORY
The Testosterone Effect
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All the same, there are social implications connected to the one area in which we know for a fact that testosterone matters sex drive. Married men tend to have lower testosterone. It's evolution's way of encouraging the wandering mate to stay home. (In newly divorced men, T levels rise again, as the men prepare to re-enter the competition for a mate.) If aging men start to routinely boost their testosterone levels, and their sexual appetite, to earlier levels, will they further upset the foundations of that ever endangered social arrangement called the family? "What happens when men have higher levels than normal?" asks James M. Dabbs, a psychology professor at Georgia State University. "They are just unmanageable."
Dabbs, the author of Heroes, Rogues and Lovers, a book about the importance of the male hormone, is another researcher who believes that T counts for a lot in any number of male moods and behaviors. "It contributes to a boldness and a sense of focus," he insists. It's possible for the scientific community to come to such disparate conclusions on the stuff, not just because the research is slim but because the complexities of human behavior are deep. If we're verging on a moment when testosterone will be treated as one more renewable resource, we may soon all get to focus more clearly on just what it does. But if men, in a culture where the meaning of manhood is up for grabs, look to testosterone for answers to the largest questions about themselves, they are likely to be disappointed. One thing we can be sure of is that the essence of manhood will always be something more complicated than any mere substance in the blood.
Reported by Lisa McLaughlin and Alice Park/New York
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April 24, 2000
COVER STORY
The Incredible Bulk Testosterone, which can increase libido and help build muscles, will be available soon in easy-to-use gel form. But it can cause liver damage and prostate cancer. Why are people willing to risk their health for it?
Never Too Buff A new book reveals a troubling obsession: how male self-worth is increasingly tied to body image
Viewpoint Joel Stein worries about his testosterone
EUROPE
Blowing the Whistle on the Past A former Czech political dissident hunts down communist-era secret police collaborators
Neither Here Nor There Serbs who deserted the war in Kosovo are finding no welcome in the West
History Wins, Irving Loses Controversial historian David Irving loses his libel suit and is branded a pro-Nazi falsifier of history
Viewpoint Rich Westerners make poor advocates for their friends in the Third World
Viewpoint Law enforcers must learn to move faster to snare global lawbreakers
MIDDLE EAST
Withdrawal Symptoms Syria vacillates as Israel seeks world support for a plan to pull its troops out of southern Lebanon
Jews on Trial An Iranian spy case undermines an ancient minority and a modern President
THE ARTS
The Rem Movement Architecture is changing. The proof? Its biggest prize, the Pritzker, goes to a thinker rather than a pure designer
Performed with True Passion The English National Opera brings Bach to vivid dramatic life
The End of Innocence Ishiguro's new novel, When We Were Orphans, probes the wounds of vanished childhood
DEPARTMENTS
Techwatch
World Watch
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