My personal favorites:

31. My hormones were out of control
39. The person was intelligent (Nothing says turn-on quite like <a href="
http://xkcd.com/55/";>this</a> for instance).
110. IT would allow me to get sex out of my system so I could focus on other
things.

Of course, many of the answers (I'm a sex addict; I'm addicted to sex) do
suffer from repetition.  More than likely, the real number remains unknown,
but I think the effort was at least a worthwhile one ;)


Study can be found here:
http://homepage.psy.utexas.edu/homepage/Group/BussLAB/pdffiles/why%20humans%20have%20sex%202007.pdf


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------------------------------
July 31, 2007
Findings
 The Whys of Mating: 237 Reasons and Counting By JOHN
TIERNEY<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/t/john_tierney/index.html?inline=nyt-per>

Scholars in antiquity began counting the ways that humans have sex, but they
weren't so diligent in cataloging the reasons humans wanted to get into all
those positions. Darwin and his successors offered a few explanations of
mating strategies — to find better genes, to gain status and resources — but
they neglected to produce a Kama Sutra of sexual motivations.

Perhaps you didn't lament this omission. Perhaps you thought that the
motivations for sex were pretty obvious. Or maybe you never really wanted to
know what was going on inside other people's minds, in which case you should
stop reading immediately.

For now, thanks to psychologists at the University of Texas at Austin, we
can at last count the whys. After asking nearly 2,000 people why they'd had
sex, the researchers have assembled and categorized a total of 237 reasons —
everything from "I wanted to feel closer to God" to "I was drunk." They even
found a few people who claimed to have been motivated by the desire to have
a child.

The researchers, Cindy M. Meston and David M. Buss, believe their list,
published in the August issue of Archives of Sexual Behavior, is the most
thorough taxonomy of sexual motivation ever compiled. This seems entirely
plausible.

Who knew, for instance, that a headache had any erotic significance except
as an excuse for saying no? But some respondents of both sexes explained
that they'd had sex "to get rid of a headache." It's No. 173 on the list.

Others said they did it to "help me fall asleep," "make my partner feel
powerful," "burn calories," "return a favor," "keep warm," "hurt an enemy"
or "change the topic of conversation." The lamest may have been, "It seemed
like good exercise," although there is also this: "Someone dared me."

Dr. Buss has studied mating strategies around the world — he's the oft-cited
author of "The Evolution of Desire" and other books — but even he did not
expect to find such varied and Machiavellian reasons for sex. "I was truly
astonished," he said, "by this richness of sexual psychology."

The researchers collected the data by first asking more than 400 people to
list their reasons for having sex, and then asking more than 1,500 others to
rate how important each reason was to them. Although it was a fairly
homogenous sample of students at the University of
Texas<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_texas/index.html?inline=nyt-org>,
nearly every one of the 237 reasons was rated by at least some people as
their most important motive for having sex.

The best news is that both men and women ranked the same reason most often:
"I was attracted to the person."

The rest of the top 10 for each gender were also almost all the same,
including "I wanted to express my love for the person," "I was sexually
aroused and wanted the release" and "It's fun."

No matter what the reason, men were more likely to cite it than women, with
a couple of notable exceptions. Women were more likely to say they had sex
because, "I wanted to express my love for the person" and "I realized I was
in love." This jibes with conventional wisdom about women emphasizing the
emotional aspects of sex, although it might also reflect the female
respondents' reluctance to admit to less lofty motives.

The results contradicted another stereotype about women: their supposed
tendency to use sex to gain status or resources.

"Our findings suggest that men do these things more than women," Dr. Buss
said, alluding to the respondents who said they'd had sex to get things,
like a promotion, a raise or a favor. Men were much more likely than women
to say they'd had sex to "boost my social status" or because the partner was
famous or "usually 'out of my league.' "

Dr. Buss said, "Although I knew that having sex has consequences for
reputation, it surprised me that people, notably men, would be motivated to
have sex solely for social status and reputation enhancement."

But then, men were also more likely than women to say they'd had sex because
"I was slumming." Or simply because "the opportunity presented itself," or
"the person demanded that I have sex."

If nothing else, the results seem to be a robust confirmation of the
hypothesis in the old joke: How can a woman get a man to take off his
clothes? Ask him.

To make sense of the 237 reasons, Dr. Buss and Dr. Meston created a taxonomy
with four general categories:

¶Physical: "The person had beautiful eyes" or "a desirable body," or "was
good kisser" or "too physically attractive to resist." Or "I wanted to
achieve an orgasm."

¶Goal Attainment: "I wanted to even the score with a cheating partner" or
"break up a rival's relationship" or "make money" or "be popular." Or
"because of a bet."

¶Emotional: "I wanted to communicate at a deeper level" or "lift my
partner's spirits" or "say 'Thank you.' " Or just because "the person was
intelligent."

¶Insecurity: "I felt like it was my duty" or "I wanted to boost my
self-esteem" or "It was the only way my partner would spend time with me."

Having sex out of a sense of duty, Dr. Buss said, showed up in a separate
study as being especially frequent among older women. But both sexes seem to
practice a strategy that he calls mate-guarding, as illustrated in one of
the reasons given by survey respondents: "I was afraid my partner would have
an affair if I didn't."

That fear seems especially reasonable after you finish reading Dr. Buss's
paper and realize just how many reasons there are for infidelity. Some
critics might complain that the list has some repetitions — it includes "I
was curious about sex" as well as "I wanted to see what all the fuss was
about" — but I'm more concerned about the reasons yet to be enumerated.

For instance, nowhere among the 237 reasons will you find the one attributed
to the actress Joan Crawford: "I need sex for a clear complexion." (The
closest is "I thought it would make me feel healthy.")Nor will you find
anything about gathering rosebuds while ye may (the 17th-century exhortation
to young virgins from Robert Herrick). Nor the similar hurry-before-we-die
rationale ("The grave's a fine and private place/ But none I think do there
embrace") from Andrew Marvell in "To His Coy Mistress."

>From even a cursory survey of literature or the modern mass market in sex
fantasies, it seems clear that this new taxonomy may not be any more
complete than the original periodic table of the elements.

When I mentioned Ms. Crawford's complexion and the poets' rationales to Dr.
Buss, he promised to consider them and all other candidates for Reason 238.

You can nominate your own reasons at
TierneyLab<http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/>.
You can also submit nominations for a brand new taxonomy: reasons for just
saying "No way!" Somehow, though, I don't think this list will be as long.

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