06 Paź 2022, Czw 20:57, PID: 862115
(Ten post był ostatnio modyfikowany: 06 Paź 2022, Czw 21:03 przez BlankAvatar.)
(06 Paź 2022, Czw 20:31)Dziadumił napisał(a): Z tego co się orientuję wygląd nas przyciąga do siebie w pierwszej kolejności, później jest cała reszta, status, wykształcenie itp. mało kto się wiąże z rozsądku, głównie baby, facet to głównie szuka takiej, która mu się po prostu podoba, kręci, no a panie to mogą być wygodnisie.Żeby poszerzyć swoje horyzonty w tej kwestii nie trzeba robić w ogóle riserczu ani przeczytać książki, wystarczy przejrzeć fragment wikipedii
Cytat:Human mating is inherently non-random. Despite the common trope "opposites attract," humans generally prefer mates who share the same or similar traits, such as genetics, quantitative phenotypes like height or body-mass index, skin pigmentation, the level of physical attractiveness, disease risk (including cancers and mental disorders), race or ethnicity, facial features, socioeconomic factors (such as (potential) income level and occupational prestige), cultural backgrounds, moral values, religious beliefs, political orientation, (perceived) personality traits (such as conscientiousness or extraversion), behavioral characteristics (such as the level of generosity or the propensity for alcoholism), educational attainment, and IQ or general intelligence. Moreover, whereas in the past marriage across status lines was more common — in the sense that the woman typically looked for a man of high status (hypergamy), a sign of access to resources, while the man was usually willing to marry down the socioeconomic ladder (hypogamy) if the woman had good domestic skills, was young and good-looking (all proxies of fertility) —, in the modern world, people tend to desire well-educated and intelligent children; this goal is better achieved by marrying bright people with high incomes, resulting in the intensification of economic assortative mating. Indeed, better educated parents tend to have children who are not only well-educated but also healthy and successful. Furthermore, the age gap between two partners has also declined. In other words, men and women became more symmetrical in the socioeconomic traits they desire in a mate. Among the aforementioned traits, the correlations in age, race or ethnicity, religion, educational attainment, and intelligence between spouses are the most pronounced, while height is one of the most heritable, with mating partners sharing 89% of the genetic variations affecting the preference for height.
Public secondary school is the last time people of various backgrounds are lumped together in the same setting. After that, they begin sorting themselves out by various measures of social screening. Among those marrying late (relative to the time when they left school), socioeconomic status is especially important.