Scientific Blackpill: Difference between revisions

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The results of this study were replicated by two longitudinal studies performed by McNulty et.al (2019). They found that controlling for the effects of childbirth, post-natal depression and stress, the length of the marriage was still a predictor of lower female [[libido]], but not male libido, which remained constant.
The results of this study were replicated by two longitudinal studies performed by McNulty et.al (2019). They found that controlling for the effects of childbirth, post-natal depression and stress, the length of the marriage was still a predictor of lower female [[libido]], but not male libido, which remained constant.


The phenomenon of women losing their romantic interest sooner than men is surprising since a quick succession of partners can be regarded as a fast [[life history]] trait, but women otherwise tend to have a slower sexuality than men, e.g. they choose their partners more carefully due to their higher [[Bateman's principle|parental investment]] and [[Scientific_Blackpill_(Supplemental)#Women_were_historically_predominantly_involved_in_cooking_and_they_never_dominated_men|resource dependence]], and their maximal reproductive rate is much slower. Women's desire to liberate themselves from their partner is highly incompatible with the demands of modern sophisticated states, and may in fact be an artifact of a past in which low investment, fast life history strategies were more useful, and women may have retained this sexuality more than men as they have overall been subject to less selective pressures, i.e. they had higher [[reproductive success]] due to men's higher [[sex drive]] and lower choosiness.
The phenomenon of women losing their romantic interest sooner than men is surprising since a quick succession of partners can be regarded as a fast [[life history]] trait, but women otherwise tend to have a slower sexuality than men, e.g. they choose their partners more carefully due to their higher [[Bateman's principle|parental investment]] and [[Scientific_Blackpill_(Supplemental)#Women_were_historically_predominantly_involved_in_cooking_and_they_never_dominated_men|resource dependence]], and their maximal reproductive rate is much slower. Women's desire to liberate themselves from their partner is highly incompatible with the demands of modern civilization, and may in fact be an artifact of a past in which low investment, fast life history strategies were more useful, and women may have retained this sexuality more than men as they have overall been subject to less selective pressures, i.e. they had higher [[reproductive success]] due to men's higher [[sex drive]] and lower choosiness.


<span style="font-size:125%">'''Figure:'''</span>
<span style="font-size:125%">'''Figure:'''</span>
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