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Nudity and/or Sexualized Nudity - Dangerous? Immoral? Taboo?

Should people worry about seeing nudity?

  • No, not at all, and violence is worse.

    Votes: 18 78.3%
  • No, not at all, but violence isn't worse (or is better)

    Votes: 3 13.0%
  • Yes, but violence is still worse.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yes, and violence isn't worse (or is better).

    Votes: 2 8.7%

  • Total voters
    23

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
(I know that this is long, so in the second post, I've bolded the most essential part, so that people can still answer the question if they don't want to read it all.)

I was recently talking to some friends about a television show franchise I deeply enjoy, Stargate (all three TV series, plus the movies, but not the terrible video games). Somehow the topic got around to nudity, perhaps because the pilot for the first of the series, SG1, has one full frontal nude scene in it. It was going to premier on Showtime, and Showtime pushed for them to include the nude scene, even though, AFAIK, the rest of the episodes in that series don't have any full nudity (can't even recall topless, so maybe none) - though I am only near the end of season five. I've seen all of Stargate: Universe, and it has one or two nude scenes, and Stargate: Atlantis might have one or two as well, it's been a while since I've seen that one.

Anyway, so in the Stargate SG1 pilot movie, there is a scene where an alien (Goa'uld, a type of parasite that looks like a leech/snake hybrid - they take over the bodies of other [usually] sentient species) is about to attack or "possess" a female human. The actress is nude and is seen from a full frontal angle. I can only assume that since Showtime was pushing for it, the writers thought that it could be used to indicate/symbolize our powerlessness/helplessness/vulnerability and drive home the point that we are simply prey and mean nothing to the Goa'uld. It certainly accomplishes that, as if it weren't for the fact that you know it's an alien, it might almost appear to be a rape about to happen. The Goa'uld is clearly menacing, and holds all the cards, while the poor woman is terrified and bare before his might (it's a less than sixty second scene).

So in the discussion with my friends, once we got around to the topic of nudity in the Stargate franchise, and after talking about that SG1 pilot nude scene, one of us asked why nudity would be so rare in a show like this; why include it 1-3 times per individual series rather than more often (especially since there are a number of times when not being naked actually causes the show to lose realism and inconsistencies in plot/flow - when, indeed, it would make far more sense for a character to be seen naked and would improve/enhance the plot development), especially after moving to HBO.

Another of my friends replied that it was because the creators and writers of the show wanted it to be a "Family Friendly Show", nothing more than PG-13 (at most, I believe almost all episodes of at least SG1 are “For all ages.”), so that children could watch it with their parents, or perhaps even alone. He suggested that because of this, it was necessary to exclude any sexualized nudity, for sure, and extremely limit even non-sexualized nudity.

Here's where it sticks in my craw, though. This show has far worse than nudity. Examples (some are specific to an individual series, but most are in each):

(Before reading, note that it is not my intention here to trash the Stargate shows. I thoroughly enjoyed all of them very much, having seen every episode except for half of SG1. The following list is for my later argument.)


* Gratuitous violence: graphic beheadings, thousands of grisly deaths and/or murders/mass-murders, frequent execution of unarmed innocents, severe beatings, repeated suicides in many varied ways, death by explosion, death by suffocation, death by violent decompression, death by crushing, half of someone's head being sliced off (showing gore/brain), amputations, death by fire, death by rapid or slow disintegration (atoms of the body ripped apart), cannibalism, and it goes even further than this in the violence category.

Admittedly, most of the time, there’s little blood (energy weapons cauterize), or you don’t get to see all of it, but there’re enough times that you see graphical and gratuitous violence to balance out the parts where you don’t. And to be fair, there is significantly less of this in SG1 (where the violence is still there, but less graphic/gratuitous) , compared to the other two. SG: Universe is probably the most graphically violent (but is still only PG-13/PG-14 at most).


* Torture: Medical procedures on conscious and aware (unwilling) subjects. Traditional and esoteric torture methods (relatively often and in many different ways). Vivid depictions of psychological torture (at least several times a season, but can be much more frequent in some). Psychopathic torture of a pregnant woman. Interrogation using heinous forms of torture. Characters attaining sadistic pleasure from the pain of innocents/others. Torture of a child. Etc.


* Atrocities: Genocide, total biocide, xenocide, abominable and reprehensible biological weapons, vivid (sometimes disturbing) depictions of the horrors of varying forms of slavery, etc.


*Occasionally graphic gore, like decaying bodies, intestines ripped out, heads exploding in showers of giblets, occasional blood (if it’s there, it’s probably a lot, but usually the weapons used cauterize wounds), Goa'uld entry "wounds' gaping open (usually in the abdomen, showing insides), etc.


Not to mention the moral dissonance (whether known by the characters or just by the viewer/s):

The heroes can be seen on many occasions holding an attitude of moral superiority (at least on the show and in their minds, even if not to the viewer’s mind) while committing incredibly morally/ethically ambiguous, and occasionally downright abhorrent acts (left out, in full detail, to avoid spoilers). They are in the habit of not even recognizing the moral implications of these actions, simply ignoring/hand-waving them away, or being absolute hypocrites without batting an eye.

For example: Main characters (protagonists/heroes) erasing the memory of an enemy (who had no choice in the matter), brainwashing him/her/it, and trying to genetically modify him/her/it in order to turn it to their side – destroying everything he/she/it once was and creating a monster who hates everyone else almost as much as he/she/it subconsciously hates itself (the fact that only ONE character [out of dozens] seems to give even the tiniest damn about the ethical implications of this, and even she doesn’t stand up against it in any way, is just horrifying – no one really understands how wrong what they’re doing is).

This after experiencing such tactics against themselves and being outraged. "Meh, it's cool for US to do it. Just not our enemies! Even though they really didn't choose to be our enemies and are only doing what they need to survive!"

All of those events/actions, while potentially making for entertaining episodes of a TV show, would be absolutely terrible in real life.


So, there you have a large list of those horrendous things that are seen on this one “Family Friendly” show. All of those things are a-ok, but nudity? Verboten.

My question is why? Why is nudity seen as so dangerous; why is it denigrated so d*** much? It’s how we’re born; how we evolved! Why would it be so deplorable for a child (or an adult) to see a naked body, when all of the abominations in the list above are completely cool/acceptable? Why is nudity somehow seen as worse than violence, death, torture, gore, atrocities, etc.? I truly don’t get it, it makes no sense to me.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying kids should be watching straight up highly sexualized nudity (otherwise known as porn ;) ). That’s not what I’m saying at all. I’m just commenting and wondering on why people seem to think that it’s such an atrocious thing for a child/pre-teen/young teen to see a naked body (not having sex, just naked) - and why some adults see it as being similarly immoral for themselves, too?

Why is it that in our "western" culture, at least in general (I know of a few exceptions, and I’m sure there’re more), society is able to tolerate violence and cruelty in a myriad different forms and to the nth level of intensity being witnessed by young people, and, yet, something wholly natural, something so inherently and completely innocuous as the human body, is seen as morally disruptive (especially to developing minds, but also to a degree even for adults) and potentially dangerous (either to mental, emotional, or "moral" health)?

Go try out that violence, see how long it takes until you’re in jail, in an asylum, or dead. Behavior that would be sickening, intolerable, and psychopathic in real life is just fine on a screen. But being naked on a screen, something that hurts no one in real life, is just unacceptable; inexplicably (IMO) infuriating many people and often causing an outcry; a wave of moral panic/outrage (I’ve seen people act up and call for shows to be banned or cancelled because of a few instances of nudity (not porn), or even a single one, in some cases! Oh, please, won’t somebody think of the children! ;) Yes, of course they don't usually succeed, but why does it get to them so much in the first place?).

Why does it matter? Why do SO many people care that much about something so trivial and innately harmless as our own bodies, especially when compared to rampant depictions of things that would be considered vile, nefarious and egregious acts, were they committed by someone in real life?
 
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Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
(Bolded parts are the most essential in order to be able to know what I'm asking.)

I know it took me a long time to get to that question, but ask yourself. Don’t just look at Stargate, that’s just the example that made me think of this. This seems common everywhere in most western cultures (at the very least in the majority of North America). I'm concerned about our demonization, conscious or not, of the human body (in addition to or as a result of doing the same to our innate human sexuality).

What makes nudity worse than violence? Why is it PG-13 to have relatively extreme violence, and yet, with any real degree of natural, non-sexual nudity (hell, even mildly sexual nudity doesn’t seem to be a real threat to anyone’s mental/emotional health!), a realm only acceptable for adult-viewers is entered? Are we really such an odd/backwards/absurd species that for our children to see a scene with breasts, a**es, or full frontal nudity inevitably causes them irreparable harm in some (IMO, imaginary) way? It just doesn’t make sense to me.

Again, note, I’m not saying kids should be watching straight up porn. I’m just trying to understand this dichotomy in the way we treat two different subjects in relation to our kids (and, I’m sure, to some extent, even in relation to ourselves as adults)?

If you had to choose, what would you show your child in real life? A torture scene/beheading/rotting-maggotty-corpse/violent-murder, or a mere naked woman/man? Then why the hell are people so seemingly afraid of it? Aren't our own bodies, and our own sexualities, better than those darker things? Isn't violence a negative thing in general, to be avoided when possible, while our own bodies, in addition to our sexualities, are positive things to be celebrated, and never ashamed of?

(btw, I keep mentioning sexuality only because I think that whatever reason we have for this nudity taboo is most likely related to how we process/experience our sexuality)

Has sexuality become such a curse for us as a society that we vilify our own bodies? That we fear them? That something so completely innocent and anodyne has become an enemy of ours’ and our children’s wellbeings? What’s wrong with this? What’s wrong with us?

For a counterexample, look at Germany. One of the friends I mentioned in the beginning of this post lives there, and he claims its completely different. There, nudity is not frowned upon or seen as taboo, in general. It just is. It’s just what we are underneath our clothes, and it’s not considered shocking or dangerous in some (imaginary) way for someone, child or adult, to see it.
I mean, seriously, look back on our ancestors. Long ago none of our ancestors wore clothes. It would have been a hindrance if you go back far enough. Our species originated on an extremely hot continent, and we had no need for clothes, generally. We saw naked people every day of our lives, all around us, everyone we knew. And, yet, we appear to have made it through without going extinct "due to nudity", and have managed to become the dominant life-form on this planet.


There’s nothing inherently wrong with nudity (and for that matter, sexuality itself, though this treatment of the naked body certainly helps instil such a feeling in so many). I sincerely wish we’d stop treating it like there were. Hell, by creating this taboo, this vilification of our own bodies, who knows what sorts of psychological/emotional/societal issues we’re causing? By maintaining this ridiculous stance on the naked human body (as well as human sexuality in general), as a society, I’d hazard to guess we are causing more problems than we solve (if we solve any, and I highly doubt that).

Anyway, I’d love to hear your thoughts on this, whatever they may be. I’m very sleep-deprived right now, so I apologize if the writing quality was subpar. I just wanted to post this today, before I went to sleep. Hopefully we can get a good debate/discussion going.

Btw, I know that lots of people here don't think like this. But, in my experience, the majority of people (at least in North America) do. If you don't think that way, then great! Why do you think so many do, and what can be done about it? Is it healthy?

If you do think that nudity and/or sexualized nudity IS wrong, then, please, enlighten me, I'd love to hear your arguments.




(Please note, I'm not suggesting we all become nudists, unless you want to, that is. ;) I'm just saying we've got our priorities drastically wrong if we try to protect ourselves and our children more from witnessing nudity or types of sexualized nudity than we do such things as violence. I just don't think that's right, and I'm wondering why we do that while other cultures have and do lack our ridiculous taboos and qualms about our own bodies.)
 
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Gjallarhorn

N'yog-Sothep
Western society can't reconcile its views on sexuality in a non-contradictory way. Families are good, but the methods of making them are bad. Thou shalt not kill, but it's okay to watch violent movies.

We're all lost.
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
This is too long.

I apologize that it is too long for you. If it helps, the first post is just a lot of information that helps my argument, the second one is the real question.

You don't HAVE to read all of it. It helps a bit, but you don't absolutely have to. Here are a couple excerpts that should shorten it to a more manageable size for you:


Official TL;DR post:


What makes nudity worse than violence? Why is it PG-13 to have relatively extreme violence, and yet, with any real degree of natural, non-sexual nudity (hell, even mildly sexual nudity doesn’t seem to be a real threat to anyone’s mental/emotional health!), a realm only acceptable for adult-viewers is entered? Are we really such an odd/backwards/absurd species that for our children to see a scene with breasts, a**es, or full frontal nudity inevitably causes them irreparable harm in some (IMO, imaginary) way? It just doesn’t make sense to me.

Again, note, I’m not saying kids should be watching straight up porn. I’m just trying to understand this dichotomy in the way we treat two different subjects in relation to our kids (and, I’m sure, to some extent, even in relation to ourselves as adults)?

If you had to choose, what would you show your child in real life? A torture scene/beheading/rotting-maggotty-corpse/violent-murder, or a mere naked woman/man? Then why the hell are people so seemingly afraid of it? Aren't our own bodies, and our own sexualities, better than those darker things? Isn't violence a negative thing in general, to be avoided when possible, while our own bodies, in addition to our sexualities, are positive things to be celebrated, and never ashamed of?

(btw, I keep mentioning sexuality only because I think that whatever reason we have for this nudity taboo is most likely related to how we process/experience our sexuality)

Has sexuality become such a curse for us as a society that we vilify our own bodies? That we fear them? That something so completely innocent and anodyne has become an enemy of ours’ and our children’s wellbeings? What’s wrong with this? What’s wrong with us?

For a counterexample, look at Germany. One of the friends I mentioned in the beginning of this post lives there, and he claims its completely different. There, nudity is not frowned upon or seen as taboo, in general. It just is. It’s just what we are underneath our clothes, and it’s not considered shocking or dangerous in some (imaginary) way for someone, child or adult, to see it.
I mean, seriously, look back on our ancestors. Long ago none of our ancestors wore clothes. It would have been a hindrance if you go back far enough. Our species originated on an extremely hot continent, and we had no need for clothes, generally. We saw naked people every day of our lives, all around us, everyone we knew. And, yet, we appear to have made it through without going extinct "due to nudity", and have managed to become the dominant life-form on this planet.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with nudity (and for that matter, sexuality itself, though this treatment of the naked body certainly helps instil such a feeling in so many). I sincerely wish we’d stop treating it like there were. Hell, by creating this taboo, this vilification of our own bodies, who knows what sorts of psychological/emotional/societal issues we’re causing? By maintaining this ridiculous stance on the naked human body (as well as human sexuality in general), as a society, I’d hazard to guess we are causing more problems than we solve (if we solve any, and I highly doubt that).

I hope that helps, I know it's long for some people, and I'm sorry about that.
 
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Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
Western society can't reconcile its views on sexuality in a non-contradictory way. Families are good, but the methods of making them are bad. Thou shalt not kill, but it's okay to watch violent movies.

We're all lost.

Hmm... How do you personally think we got that way, out of curiosity?

And you don't think there's any way to reconcile those views? That would be pretty depressing, but what can you do, I guess?

I still want to better understand it, hopefully this thread will help.
 

Gjallarhorn

N'yog-Sothep
Hmm... How do you personally think we got that way, out of curiosity?

And you don't think there's any way to reconcile those views? That would be pretty depressing, but what can you do, I guess?

I still want to better understand it, hopefully this thread will help.
I would say it traces back to the Bible. Be fruitful and multiply, but the body is unclean most of your life.

There is no way to reconcile them. One will have to cave for the other. If you want families stigmatizing sex is contrary to the goal.
 

Saint Frankenstein

Wanderer From Afar
Premium Member
I apologize that it is too long for you. If it helps, the first post is just a lot of information that helps my argument, the second one is the real question.

You don't HAVE to read all of it. It helps a bit, but you don't absolutely have to. Here are a couple excerpts that should shorten it to a more manageable size for you:


Official TL;DR post:




I hope that helps, I know it's long for some people, and I'm sorry about that.

Thanks. No need to apologize, man. You're very polite. I just find that it's usually better to make shorter posts for brevity, on forums.

I agree with you. Nudity is not harmful at all and I'd rather my child see nudity or even healthy sexuality over violence.

Speaking from personal experience, I was exposed to hardcore porn at a very young age because my father had a lot of issues and left it around. When I saw it, it was intriguing to me, but also confusing because I didn't understand it. When I was hitting puberty and the hormones were flowing, I would watch stuff like Skinemax (lol) and, later on, porn on the Internet when I got my own computer. My mom kinda guilted me because he thought I would turn out like my dad. Anyway, I dealt with guilt problems over sex for a long time, even self-hatred.

However, it never gave me nightmares or anything like some of the graphically violent horror movies I watched at a young age. Eventually, when I was older, due to curiosity, I would go to real death and gore sites like Ogrish and some of the things I've seen on those sites are very traumatizing and bother me to this day.

Basically, violence, real or imaginary, are far more traumatizing than nudity or sex is. None of the porn or anything like that I've seen bothers me (not that young children should be watching porn because it can be very confusing. But nudity is perfectly fine. I think children should be taught to have healthy views of the body and not to be ashamed. I grew up with a lot of shame and it still effects me to this day. :( )

It really is a cultural thing. America is a very sexually repressed society due to the influence of conservative Christianity. Other cultures are much more open about it and don't have these issues.
 

Penumbra

Veteran Member
Premium Member
Okay I didn't read all that but it seems clear to me that violence is way worse of a problem than nudity. Violence can constructively appear in fiction, but often it seems used inappropriately or excessively. I don't think there's anything wrong with nudity, but sexualization and objectification tend to be significant social problems, imo.
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
I would say it traces back to the Bible. Be fruitful and multiply, but the body is unclean most of your life.

There is no way to reconcile them. One will have to cave for the other. If you want families stigmatizing sex is contrary to the goal.

Hmmm... I pretty much agree with you, the Bible does seem to be a major contributor to the root of this problem.

Which do you think will cave?

Wow, I hope that we can eventually come up with some sort of new arrangement or compromise in thought/belief. Otherwise, like you say, it would appear we are, indeed, lost.
 

Gjallarhorn

N'yog-Sothep
Hmmm... I pretty much agree with you, the Bible does seem to be a major contributor to the root of this problem.

Which do you think will cave?

Wow, I hope that we can eventually come up with some sort of new arrangement or compromise in thought/belief. Otherwise, like you say, it would appear we are, indeed, lost.

Family seems to be going naturally. Industrialized society doesn't smile on traditional family models. Unwanted pregnancy will be prevented with contraceptives, which will encourage sexuality by eliminating the risks.
 

Thana

Lady
Nudity/Sexuality provokes.
Violence generally doesn't.

And I've yet to see a kids show where they lop off heads and have blood splatter all over the place. Sure there's punching and so on, But nothing too graphic as far as I know.
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
Thanks. No need to apologize, man. You're very polite.

I try to be. Thanks for noticing! :D

I just find that it's usually better to make shorter posts for brevity, on forums.

You're certainly right. I'm a writer, though, and I just zipped along writing that, not realizing how long I was making it until after I posted it. Like I said, I'm a little sleep-deprived at the moment, so I just lost track of length.

I agree with you. Nudity is not harmful at all and I'd rather my child see nudity or even healthy sexuality over violence.

Awesome, it's good to see some people see "the light" on this.

Speaking from personal experience, I was exposed to hardcore porn at a very young age because my father had a lot of issues and left it around.
When I saw it, it was intriguing to me, but also confusing because I didn't understand it. When I was hitting puberty and the hormones were flowing, I would watch stuff like Skinemax (lol) and, later on, porn on the Internet when I got my own computer. My mom kinda guilted me because he thought I would turn out like my dad. Anyway, I dealt with guilt problems over sex for a long time, even self-hatred.

That's terrible, I feel for you. I had similar experiences, though it wasn't because of my dad for me, but because I was a computer whiz at a young age, and I got a laptop at a very young age. The internet was wide open for me, even its darkest recesses. If you ever want to talk about that guilt/self-hatred, I'm here. I know we just met, but still, the offer's open anytime you want to take it.

However, it never gave me nightmares or anything like some of the graphically violent horror movies I watched at a young age. Eventually, when I was older, due to curiosity, I would go to real death and gore sites like Ogrish and some of the things I've seen on those sites are very traumatizing and bother me to this day.

Wow, you too with Ogrish? I did the same thing, and I, like you, still get flashes of images I'd seen back then occasionally. Not all the time, not pervasively, but when it happens, it can be troubling.

Basically, violence, real or imaginary, are far more traumatizing than nudity or sex is. None of the porn or anything like that I've seen bothers me (not that young children should be watching porn because it can be very confusing. But nudity is perfectly fine. I think children should be taught to have healthy views of the body and not to be ashamed. I grew up with a lot of shame and it still effects me to this day. :( )

I agree 100%. Shame is an absurdly destructive social device/emotion.

It really is a cultural thing. America is a very sexually repressed society due to the influence of conservative Christianity. Other cultures are much more open about it and don't have these issues.

Hmm... I wonder if it has to do with the Christians that sailed west to North America in particular? Because I know even up here in Canada, we have a lot of people like that, depending on where in Canada you are. Still, I'd say we have it slightly better than the U.S., regarding attitudes towards nudity and sexuality.
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
Okay I didn't read all that but it seems clear to me that violence is way worse of a problem than nudity. Violence can constructively appear in fiction, but often it seems used inappropriately or excessively. I don't think there's anything wrong with nudity, but sexualization and objectification tend to be significant social problems, imo.

I agree with you, mostly, but I'm not sure, fully, what you mean by sexualization and objectification (though I have an idea).
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
Nudity/Sexuality provokes.
Violence generally doesn't.

How do you mean? I don't follow.



And I've yet to see a kids show where they lop off heads and have blood splatter all over the place. Sure there's punching and so on, But nothing too graphic as far as I know.

I wouldn't be so sure about that. In this era, kids can find whatever they want/whatever they stumble into. I managed it when I was a kid.
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
Family seems to be going naturally. Industrialized society doesn't smile on traditional family models. Unwanted pregnancy will be prevented with contraceptives, which will encourage sexuality by eliminating the risks.

So do you mean that the entire structure of the family is going to break down or shift in nature (compromise to fit the interests of industrial society) unless a more realistic and effective cultural perspective on sexuality develops that can avert the crisis? Or am I just too tired? ;)
 

Thana

Lady
How do you mean? I don't follow.

Well, Nudity and sexuality makes one curious/interested/aroused. It provokes feelings and thoughts of that nature.

Violence.. not so much (or as much).
Watching a show as a kid with violence never aroused any anger or desire to do anything of a violent nature.

Sure, There are exceptions. But I'm speaking generally.
 

Gjallarhorn

N'yog-Sothep
So do you mean that the entire structure of the family is going to break down or shift in nature (compromise to fit the interests of industrial society) unless a more realistic and effective cultural perspective on sexuality develops that can avert the crisis? Or am I just too tired? ;)
No "unless". It just will. Whatever comes after that will either be extremely nihilistic and antinatalistic or (hopefully) sexually positive.

Well, Nudity and sexuality makes one curious/interested/aroused. It provokes feelings and thoughts of that nature.

Violence.. not so much (or as much).
Watching a show as a kid with violence never aroused any anger or desire to do anything of a violent nature.

Sure, There are exceptions. But I'm speaking generally.
Violence and sex do not provoke anger and arousal in children. They provoke curiosity, which is why children play doctor and bring knives and guns to school.

Your generalizing is masking the issue.
 

Druidus

Keeper of the Grove
Well, Nudity and sexuality makes one curious/interested/aroused. It provokes feelings and thoughts of that nature.

It makes you curious. If you pursue that curiosity to the point where you are interested or aroused, so what? What's wrong with that?

And besides, it's not nudity alone that does that naturally. We lived in tribes where all of us were naked, all day long, every week, of every month, of every year. Do you really think we were aroused/interested all the time, or even curious? No, it was just the norm. By having this nudity taboo, you only increase this provocation that you think comes from nudity. It doesn't come from nudity itself, it comes from mystifying and sexualizing mere nudity. Nudity itself should not be sexual; it takes more than that, it takes a sexualizing factor. Before we had the nudity taboo and we were naked all the time, nudity held no power/sway with us, not sexually, not unless accompanied by some other behaviour or stimuli that promoted its sexualization.

Aside from the point that nudity before the nudity-taboo was not "provocative", what's wrong with provoking those "feelings and thoughts" in the first place? I assume you mean they were sexual? Is there something wrong with that? I don't understand that idea, if that is what you believe.

Today, because of the nudity taboo, merely seeing someone naked or trying to envision them naked may provoke sexual thoughts and feelings. That's only because it's something we don't see all the time, and, being unused to it, it initiates our curiosity, as it would have when we were children, followed by growing interest and finally arousal. The mere act of seeing or imagining someone naked was not enough in the past, it would take further communication between the two parties.

Violence.. not so much (or as much).
Watching a show as a kid with violence never aroused any anger or desire to do anything of a violent nature.

Perhaps for you. As you well know, there are 7+ billion other individuals out there, and many of those people were affected by violent imagery in their childhood. Are you really saying that exposure to violent imagery or stimuli at a young age will not lead to psychological effects down the road? Because that's definitely not the case. It certainly does possess a strong probability of leading to detrimental effects on the mind and/or its emotions, depending on the person, the exact stimuli, and other variables.

Why do you think it wouldn't? I'm not trying to be rude, here, btw, I'm actually wondering the "why" of it. Why do you think that violent experiences/stimuli/imagery wouldn't lead to effects on the brain? If it's only your own experiences or those of people you know, that's merely anecdotal evidence.
 
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