So why not make the treatment in a way that he couldn't have sexual desires conducted by violence? I mean there's certainly a way to condition his brain in a way that his body would only react badly if he has bad and violent intentions behind it. As much as I loved the movie, this detail always bugged as well. It is unfair to deprive a human being from one of his basic instincts which is to reproduce. He certainly still had a sex drive and if he couldn't practice it in a natural and inoffensive way, he would simply go insane.
Maybe like another poster said, the final scene was there to show us that Alex could still practice sex without any thought of malice or violence. When the topless girl goes on stage to test him, the gesture he was trying to make is more associated with sexual harassment than passionate and consensual sex, so maybe the point wasn't that he was conditioned to get sick by the simple thought of sex because we have to note: he clearly desired the girl before she was in front of him and he tried to touch her breasts. He wasn't sick because of the thought of sex, he got sick when he started trying to make a socially deviant action.
I wouldn't take everything I said for gold, but I think it makes sense. But if my second paragraph is not accurate and he litteraly was unable to have sex in any way, well then I am with the OP, it wouldn't really human
Watching films was a big part of his treatments, so they should have shown movies that would be nuancing between what's a bad way to do it, and what's a good way (for example: a movie that would show rape as an example of a deviant approach and compare it with a married couple having passionate sex as an example of good approach).
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