Trusted, Automoderated users
17,538
edits
| Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
Reshuffling the cards is free for women as there is an [[Bateman's principle|oversupply of men]], but for men this means restarting from zero, amassing and investing his resources anew, explaining perhaps the higher suicide rate among young male widows,<ref>https://incels.wiki/w/Scientific_Blackpill#Being_widowed_in_one.27s_20s_increases_suicide_risk_by_.7E17x_for_men.2C_but_only_.7E4x_for_women</ref> and why women are less resistant to alien rule than men.<ref>http://faculty.washington.edu/hechter/KanazawaPaper.pdf</ref>. | Reshuffling the cards is free for women as there is an [[Bateman's principle|oversupply of men]], but for men this means restarting from zero, amassing and investing his resources anew, explaining perhaps the higher suicide rate among young male widows,<ref>https://incels.wiki/w/Scientific_Blackpill#Being_widowed_in_one.27s_20s_increases_suicide_risk_by_.7E17x_for_men.2C_but_only_.7E4x_for_women</ref> and why women are less resistant to alien rule than men.<ref>http://faculty.washington.edu/hechter/KanazawaPaper.pdf</ref>. | ||
These diverging interests are an instance of [[sexual conflict]] and similar behaviors can be observed in many species, even fish and lizards, | These diverging interests are an instance of [[sexual conflict]] and similar behaviors can be observed in many species, even fish and lizards, in which the female's coy desire to mate with many high status males requires to be met with some amount of stamina or even coercion on part of the male for the copulation to take place at all, thereby also further testing the male.<ref>Eibl-Eibesfeldt I. 1989. ''Pair Formation, Courtship, Sexual Love.'' In: ''Human Ethology.'' Rougtledge. [[https://books.google.com/books?id=-CExDwAAQBAJ&lpg=PT6&ots=KctjD7Zprm&dq=Pair%20Formation%2C%20Courtship%2C%20Sexual%20Love&pg=PT335#v=onepage&q=Pair%20Formation,%20Courtship,%20Sexual%20Love&f=false Excerpt]]</ref><ref name="eibl1990">Eibl-Eibesfeldt I. 1990. ''Dominance, Submission, and Love: Sexual Pathologies from the Perspective of Ethology.'' In: Feierman, J. R. (ed.): Pedophilia. Biosocial Dimensions. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1990 151-175. [[https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-9682-6_6 Abstract]]</ref> | ||
Overall this behavior seems very primitive and incompatible with modern civilizations, which may be explained by the fact that women have been subject to [[reproductive success|less selection pressure]], so their sexuality may be stuck in a more [[Life history|r-selected]] past. | Overall this behavior seems very primitive and incompatible with modern civilizations, which may be explained by the fact that women have been subject to [[reproductive success|less selection pressure]], so their sexuality may be stuck in a more [[Life history|r-selected]] past. | ||