Scientific Blackpill: Difference between revisions

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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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