Scientific Blackpill: Difference between revisions

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===<span style="font-family:'Linux Libertine, Georgia, Times, serif'; font-size:24px; font-weight: normal;">All women view the bodies of "strong looking men" as more attractive then those with weaker bodies</span>===
===<span style="font-family:'Linux Libertine, Georgia, Times, serif'; font-size:24px; font-weight: normal;">All women view the bodies of "strong looking men" as more attractive then those with weaker bodies</span>===
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Two studies by Sell,Lukazsweski and Townsley (2017) published by the Royal Society examining the preferences of 100 young female raters, found a very strong (r=0.80) correlation between bodily attractiveness and rated physical strength. Furthermore, they discovered "we found no evidence of the inverted-U hypothesis(i.e that there is a level of musculature/physicality that 'too much' to be attractive); rather, in both samples, the strongest men were the most attractive, and the weakest men were the least attractive".  
Two studies by Sell,Lukazsweski and Townsley (2017) published by the Royal Society examining the preferences of 160 young female raters, found a very strong (r=0.80) correlation between bodily attractiveness and rated physical strength. Furthermore, they discovered "we found no evidence of the inverted-U hypothesis(i.e that there is a level of musculature/physicality that 'too much' to be attractive); rather, in both samples, the strongest men were the most attractive, and the weakest men were the least attractive".  


The authors of the study also found that "(The data was) examined to see if any women in our samples showed a significant preference for weaker men. They did not. '''None of the 160 women in our study who rated attractiveness produced a statistically significant preference for weaker men''' (all p > 0.05) ... In other words, we could find no evidence that there exists a sizeable population of women who prefer physically weaker men when evaluating male bodies."
The authors of the study also found that "(The data was) examined to see if any women in our samples showed a significant preference for weaker men. They did not. '''None of the 160 women in our study who rated attractiveness produced a statistically significant preference for weaker men''' (all p > 0.05) ... In other words, we could find no evidence that there exists a sizeable population of women who prefer physically weaker men when evaluating male bodies."

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