Roy Baumeister: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
50 bytes added ,  24 March 2020
Line 9: Line 9:


==Blackpill conflict==
==Blackpill conflict==
Although a lot of his observations are cited in the [[blackpill]] philosophy, contrary to a founding principle of [[blackpill|blackpill]] philosophy, Roy acknowledges female sexual ''desire'' (rather than just behaviour) as malleable by society in short time-frames.<ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10825779</ref>  Contrary to further additions to blackpill philosophy, he also suggests that men are more lookist.  He believes female sex-drive is more malleable by society than male sexuality, what he dubs a 'high erotic plasticity'.<ref>https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10825779/</ref>  And he suggests that the malleability makes women suited for cultural progress, rather than degeneration due to inflexibility as the [[blackpill]] states.
Although a lot of his observations are cited in the [[blackpill]] philosophy, contrary to a founding principle of [[blackpill|blackpill]] philosophy, Roy acknowledges female sexual ''desire'' (rather than just behaviour) as malleable by society in short time-frames.<ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10825779</ref>  Contrary to further additions to blackpill philosophy, he also suggests that men's sexuality is more superficial and physically oriented than women.  He believes female sex-drive is more malleable by society than male sexuality, what he dubs a 'high erotic plasticity'.<ref>https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10825779/</ref>  And he suggests that the malleability makes women suited for cultural progress, rather than degeneration due to inflexibility as the [[blackpill]] states.


{{Quote|"Men's sexuality revolves around physical factors, in which nature is predominant and the social and cultural dimension is secondary. For women, cultural factors play a much greater role, and the role of physical processes and biological nature is smaller"}}
{{Quote|"Men's sexuality revolves around physical factors, in which nature is predominant and the social and cultural dimension is secondary. For women, cultural factors play a much greater role, and the role of physical processes and biological nature is smaller"}}
25,837

edits

Navigation menu