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The frequency of women's rape fantasies may be related to [[Scientific Blackpill#62.25_of_women_have_fantasies_about_rape_and_other_forced_sex_acts|women's preference for low-empathy males]]. After all, raping someone requires indifference to their feelings. The ability to rape may also act as an [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signalling_theory honest signal] of physical strength and high status, thus choosing such a male would not only provide protection and access to resources, but rapist tendencies would also confer the same fitness advantage on the offspring. | The frequency of women's rape fantasies may be related to [[Scientific Blackpill#62.25_of_women_have_fantasies_about_rape_and_other_forced_sex_acts|women's preference for low-empathy males]]. After all, raping someone requires indifference to their feelings. The ability to rape may also act as an [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signalling_theory honest signal] of physical strength and high status, thus choosing such a male would not only provide protection and access to resources, but rapist tendencies would also confer the same fitness advantage on the offspring. | ||
The reluctance to sex and wish to be forced into sex may also test men for their physical strength, as women depend on a physically strong man to be protected, e.g. from other contenders (bodyguard hypothesis). This is related to the male dominance/female surrender pattern that is common in the animal world. The male must present a display of dominance, pursue, and sometimes physically subdue the female and overcome her coyness (Fisher, 1999), possibly as a test of his power, fitness and status. Fisher suggests that females may have a natural desire to surrender to a selected, dominant male. Eibl-Eibesfeldt (1989) suggests this behavior comes from from primitive brain regions that have evolved to insure successful mating in reptiles, birds, and mammals. | The reluctance to sex and wish to be forced into sex may also test men for their physical strength, as women depend on a physically strong man to be protected, e.g. from other contenders (bodyguard hypothesis). This is related to the male dominance/female surrender pattern that is common in the animal world. The male must present a display of dominance, pursue, and sometimes physically subdue the female and overcome her coyness (Fisher, 1999), possibly as a test of his power, fitness and status. Fisher suggests that females may have a natural desire to surrender to a selected, dominant male. Eibl-Eibesfeldt (1989) suggests this behavior comes from from primitive brain regions that have evolved to insure successful mating in reptiles, birds, and mammals. | ||
The insight that women desire to be dominated reminds of [[pickup artist]]ry and could count as [[redpill]] as it is actually something men can improve on. However, it remains a blackpill to the degree men are shamed in for their attempts at dominant behavior by [[feminism]]. | |||
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