Acharya Prashant explains that while people may call sex evil, he views it as mostly "stupid." The stupidity lies not in the physical act itself, but in the hopes, expectations, and dreams that humans attach to it. Unlike animals, humans engage in sexual activity hoping to transcend their restlessness, bondages, and tension. For humans, sex is much more of a social phenomenon than a biological one, heavily determined by influences like the media, friends, and prevailing trends. This leads to the futile attempt to "find God in genitals," which inevitably ends in disappointment. The speaker describes the human condition as one of constantly feeling small and belittled by the vastness of the world, which creates an eager desire to get something from it. He uses the analogy of dogs salivating around a meat shop, hoping for a scrap of refuse, to illustrate how the common person looks at the world, constantly asking, "Can I have something from it?" The world offers money, prestige, comfort, and pleasure, and the individual wants a piece of it all. This constant seeking of "flesh" is what defines the human approach to sex. The crucial difference, he points out, is that a dog sees meat simply as something to fill its stomach, not as a means of liberation. Humans, on the other hand, look to the world's offerings to fill an "existential hollow" at their core. Since no material object, person, or achievement can fill this void, sex consistently fails to provide lasting fulfillment, leading to an insatiable need for more. This is why, unlike animals for whom sex is episodic, man is the only animal that is always sexually active. Acharya Prashant concludes that man is perpetually sexually active because he is perpetually ambitious. Because humans constantly feel an inner hollowness and inferiority, they are always seeking something from the world. The constant seeking of sexual gratification is a direct byproduct of this perpetual search for external validation through prestige, money, and success. He states that these two forms of seeking are one and the same.