Hypergamy: Difference between revisions

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This restlessness seems to be driven by an evolutionarily-based fear about access to resources and by an anxiety about being stuck with a man who isn't the best one available.<ref>https://therationalmale.com/2019/03/11/womens-existential-fear/</ref>
This restlessness seems to be driven by an evolutionarily-based fear about access to resources and by an anxiety about being stuck with a man who isn't the best one available.<ref>https://therationalmale.com/2019/03/11/womens-existential-fear/</ref>
In terms of evolutionary biology, such instinctive behavior is corroborated by [[Bateman's principle]], which also explains greater sexual choosiness in non-human females.  Researchers also suggested that hypergamy naturally arises, and is more likely to occur the more resources a man has compared to the woman.<ref>https://d-nb.info/997448148/34</ref>.  
In terms of evolutionary biology, such instinctive behavior is corroborated by [[Bateman's principle]], which also explains greater sexual choosiness in non-human females.  Researchers also suggested that hypergamy naturally arises, and is more likely to occur the more resources a man has compared to the woman.<ref>https://d-nb.info/997448148/34</ref>.  
And that this is due to the fact that men desire sex more than women, giving women a power advantage, otherwise known as the, "principle of least interest". Sex then becomes a "female resource for social exchange", in which a "broad range of valued goods" are competed for by men in order to bribe women for sex<ref>https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016748701630277X</ref>
And that this is due to the fact that men desire sex more than women, giving women a power advantage, part of what is broadly as the, "principle of least interest". Sex then becomes a "female resource for social exchange", in which a, "broad range of valued goods" are competed for by men in order to bribe women for sex<ref>https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016748701630277X</ref>


There are mixed results about the importance of a power differential regarding income and education for women's marital satisfaction.
There are mixed results about the importance of a power differential regarding income and education for women's marital satisfaction.
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