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Valentine’s Day Edition: Oysters, rhino horn and other pseudoscience claims

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Feb. 14, 2013 — Here’s what I learned last night about aphrodisiacs: While oysters, ginseng and rhinoceros horn have all been touted as the perfect means to arouse or intensify sexual desire, none has ever been proven to have aphrodisiac qualities. Sure, oysters have a high zinc and D-aspartic acid content, both of which have been linked to testosterone production. But at the end of the day, said Andy Greenspon, an earnestly inquisitive young scientist from Harvard, “you would be better off simply eating a well-balanced diet and exercising regularly.” Similarly, ginseng is no more...Read full article

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    Published: February 2013
    Andy GreensponaphrodisiacsAsk for EvidenceDifferent WavelengthsGary BoasGary Boas BlogginsengHarvard UniversityJoanna ChristodoulouMorgan Thompsonoystersrhinoceros hornScience and Social Justice ProjectSense About ScienceValkeeVoice of Young Science USAVoYS USA

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