Feminization: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Feminization''' or '''demasculinization''' refers to the development of an organism away from the male phenotype and toward the female phenotype, resulting in '''effeminacy'''.  Alternatively, these terms also refer to social norms encouraging or enforcing naturally female behavior, e.g. by reducing men's [[promiscuity|infidelity]] as well as their competitive and "[[toxic masculinity|toxic]]" behavior, while also increasing their agreeableness, parental investment and overall domestication. These sociocultural trends are largely driven by [[feminism|feminist]] politicians with the goal of abolishing the "classical gender roles" (or rather advancing their careers in a system that [[virtue signaling|favors]] these memes).
'''Feminization''' or '''demasculinization''' refers to the development of an organism away from the male phenotype and toward the female phenotype, resulting in '''effeminacy'''.  Alternatively, these terms also refer to social norms encouraging or enforcing naturally female behavior, e.g. by reducing men's [[promiscuity|infidelity]] as well as their competitive and "[[toxic masculinity|toxic]]" behavior, while also increasing their agreeableness, parental investment and overall domestication. These sociocultural trends are largely driven by [[feminism|feminist]] politicians with the goal of abolishing the "classical gender roles" (or rather advancing their careers in a system that [[virtue signaling|favors]] these values).


There is a growing body of evidence of men having become less masculine and more feminine in various regards in modern, industrialized nations. For women, there is diverging evidence regarding the secular trajectory on the masculine-feminine dimension, with women becoming more masculine in some regards and weaker evidence for them becoming more feminine.
There is a growing body of evidence of men having become less masculine and more feminine in various regards in modern, industrialized nations. For women, there is diverging evidence regarding the secular trajectory on the masculine-feminine dimension, with women becoming more masculine in some regards and weaker evidence for them becoming more feminine.
17,538

edits

Navigation menu