A simple and straightforward question: what is the default mating pattern of the human male and human female?
By "default", I refer to the pattern which existed during the period in which the details of human mating psychology reached their current form, without the interference of civilisation and its institutions. So we can take that period to mean the time from ~100,000 years ago till now.
We can also mean it to be the pattern we are soft-wired for, in the sense that the software we run on, if not re-programmed into some other setting by our culture, would take that pattern as the default on which to operate. Another, equivalent definition is that it is the pattern which would emerge if civilisation and its institutions collapsed tomorrow, without any catastrophe, and humans had to "find themselves" anew.
In the simplest terms - what pattern of mating behaviour is most natural to humans?
Second, this isn't a factual question in the sense of "Please Google this and give me the answer"; I am perfectly capable of doing that on my own. Instead, I want your views, at the moment, before you've done any Googling. I want to know your own "theory", or "folk psychology", of human mating behaviour; I want to know what you think is the nature, in the mating game, of human men and women.
I want sex-specific answers. That is, I want to know what pattern you think the nature of men and women falls into. If it's the same, then please specify that. If it's different, then please describe the patterns for each, and so on.
(Note that I do not include homosexuals in this discussion - only men and women. The topic of homosexuality complicates the discussion somewhat, and right now I don't want that.)
There are a few patterns I'd like to lay on the table, so that you have an idea of what exactly I mean by "pattern of mating behaviour".
There are three things I consider important in defining this pattern:
1) Number of (official) simultaneous partners: how many "recognised" or "legitimate" partners the person has at one time.
2) Deviancy: how much the person deviates from the "official" status quo, usually by mating outside the pool of "official" partners.
3) Stability: how long an "official" mating relationship lasts or how difficult it is to get out of it; this also describes the element of uncertainty inherent in that relation.
I hope an example will make this clearer. A man who is "traditionally monogamous" is one who marries only a single wife, never cheats on her, and stays married until death parts him from his wife. This applies mutatis mutandis for a "traditional woman".
Another example can be the archetypical "loose woman"; she either has multiple partners at once, without there being any "official" relationship, so the questions of deviancy and stability do not arise, or she is serially monogamous in quick succession and ends a relationship by cheating on her previous partner, which means that she has, at one time, only a single "official partner" (married or unmarried is irrelevant, it's the reality on the ground that counts), the deviancy is very high, and stability is low.
For the first parameter, the options are:
1) Monogamy
2) Polygamy
3) Undefined (there is no structure to the relation, it's a free-for-all)
4) Other (your own)
For the second, they are:
1) None
2) Low
3) Medium
4) High
5) Other (some profile which you think is more descriptive)
For the third, they are roughly the same.
So again: by these measures, what is the "default" pattern of the mating behaviour of human men and women?
By "default", I refer to the pattern which existed during the period in which the details of human mating psychology reached their current form, without the interference of civilisation and its institutions. So we can take that period to mean the time from ~100,000 years ago till now.
We can also mean it to be the pattern we are soft-wired for, in the sense that the software we run on, if not re-programmed into some other setting by our culture, would take that pattern as the default on which to operate. Another, equivalent definition is that it is the pattern which would emerge if civilisation and its institutions collapsed tomorrow, without any catastrophe, and humans had to "find themselves" anew.
In the simplest terms - what pattern of mating behaviour is most natural to humans?
Second, this isn't a factual question in the sense of "Please Google this and give me the answer"; I am perfectly capable of doing that on my own. Instead, I want your views, at the moment, before you've done any Googling. I want to know your own "theory", or "folk psychology", of human mating behaviour; I want to know what you think is the nature, in the mating game, of human men and women.
I want sex-specific answers. That is, I want to know what pattern you think the nature of men and women falls into. If it's the same, then please specify that. If it's different, then please describe the patterns for each, and so on.
(Note that I do not include homosexuals in this discussion - only men and women. The topic of homosexuality complicates the discussion somewhat, and right now I don't want that.)
There are a few patterns I'd like to lay on the table, so that you have an idea of what exactly I mean by "pattern of mating behaviour".
There are three things I consider important in defining this pattern:
1) Number of (official) simultaneous partners: how many "recognised" or "legitimate" partners the person has at one time.
2) Deviancy: how much the person deviates from the "official" status quo, usually by mating outside the pool of "official" partners.
3) Stability: how long an "official" mating relationship lasts or how difficult it is to get out of it; this also describes the element of uncertainty inherent in that relation.
I hope an example will make this clearer. A man who is "traditionally monogamous" is one who marries only a single wife, never cheats on her, and stays married until death parts him from his wife. This applies mutatis mutandis for a "traditional woman".
Another example can be the archetypical "loose woman"; she either has multiple partners at once, without there being any "official" relationship, so the questions of deviancy and stability do not arise, or she is serially monogamous in quick succession and ends a relationship by cheating on her previous partner, which means that she has, at one time, only a single "official partner" (married or unmarried is irrelevant, it's the reality on the ground that counts), the deviancy is very high, and stability is low.
For the first parameter, the options are:
1) Monogamy
2) Polygamy
3) Undefined (there is no structure to the relation, it's a free-for-all)
4) Other (your own)
For the second, they are:
1) None
2) Low
3) Medium
4) High
5) Other (some profile which you think is more descriptive)
For the third, they are roughly the same.
So again: by these measures, what is the "default" pattern of the mating behaviour of human men and women?
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