I understand the talmud says that a man may not think about another woman during marital relations, does the same prohibition apply to the woman?
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This question would be easier to answer if you would include a citation of where the Talmud says this law fro a man. If you don't know, then including as much information as possible about where your understanding comes from could help others track it down.– Isaac Moses ♦Commented Jan 28, 2015 at 20:00
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This is a specific case of this related question, and it is answered there.– FredCommented Jan 28, 2015 at 20:03
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@Fred thanks, didn't see that. you can delete this question– user8735Commented Jan 28, 2015 at 20:10
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This may have been prompted by a recent podcast claiming the gemara about women leaving the mikva and gazing at Rabbi Yochanan's handsome countenance (B'rachos 20a, Bava M'tzi'a 84a) meant that the women were fantasizing about R' Yochanan when they were with their husbands (though this is contrary to the rabbinic understanding of maternal impression, and would be prohibited by the sources cited in my linked answer). It's unclear whether the podcast also understood the incident with Rava as involving fantasizing (K'subos 65a), in which case that would also be incorrect.– FredCommented Jan 29, 2015 at 21:41
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