Demographics of inceldom: Difference between revisions

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In a 1989 peer-reviewed study that took place at Florida State University, 75% of men accepted random-sex invitations from random real-life women, whereas 0% of women accepted such offers.<ref>https://www.sciencefriday.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/gender-differences-in-receptivity-to-sexual-offers.pdf.</ref>  This combats the notion that men have choice in casual sex matters when they are not high-status, due to 0% of women accepting random-sex no-strings offers in a setting high in casual sex. That men have no choice in casual sex matters also makes overall celibacy rates seem to be mostly a product of women's choices than mens.  The Florida study also showed both genders accept dates at a similar rate.  That more women accept dates rather than direct-sex invitations suggest they use dates as a vetting mechanism, whereas men less so.
In a 1989 peer-reviewed study that took place at Florida State University, 75% of men accepted random-sex invitations from random real-life women, whereas 0% of women accepted such offers.<ref>https://www.sciencefriday.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/gender-differences-in-receptivity-to-sexual-offers.pdf.</ref>  This combats the notion that men have choice in casual sex matters when they are not high-status, due to 0% of women accepting random-sex no-strings offers in a setting high in casual sex. That men have no choice in casual sex matters also makes overall celibacy rates seem to be mostly a product of women's choices than mens.  The Florida study also showed both genders accept dates at a similar rate.  That more women accept dates rather than direct-sex invitations suggest they use dates as a vetting mechanism, whereas men less so.


There have been attempts to replicate this study in practice or theory, however all appear to have been non-naturalistic studies, unlike Hatfield and Clark, making them ultimately not interesting.  They also vary in conclusions.  Some agree with Hatfield and Clark<ref>https://interpersona.psychopen.eu/article/view/121/html</ref>, while others are more dismissive based on a dislike of the fact that the sex was no-strings.
There have been attempts to replicate this study in practice or theory, however all appear to have been non-naturalistic studies, unlike Hatfield and Clark, making them ultimately not interesting.  They also vary in conclusions.  Some agree with Hatfield and Clark<ref>https://interpersona.psychopen.eu/article/view/121/html</ref>, while others are more dismissive based on a dislike of the fact that men who offered sex did not disclose their status to women.


===Sexual frustration is a majoritarian issue===
===Sexual frustration is a majoritarian issue===
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