Dominance hierarchy: Difference between revisions

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Aggressive dominance is linked to a fast [[life history]] strategy, while non-aggressive dominance can be regarded as a slow life history strategy. Human dominance hierarchies tend toward the latter due to [[neoteny]] and a high prevalence of [[arranged marriage]] rather than free mate choice which have likely resulted from [[wikipedia:Self-domestication|self-domestication]].
Aggressive dominance is linked to a fast [[life history]] strategy, while non-aggressive dominance can be regarded as a slow life history strategy. Human dominance hierarchies tend toward the latter due to [[neoteny]] and a high prevalence of [[arranged marriage]] rather than free mate choice which have likely resulted from [[wikipedia:Self-domestication|self-domestication]].
For human males, there is a link between social dominance and [[reproductive success]]. This link is, however, much weaker than in closely related nonhuman primates (r = .19 vs r = .8).<ref>https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27601650/</ref>


== Manosphere ==
== Manosphere ==
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