Modern Wisdom - #586 - Dr Khandis Blake - Why Do Women Take Sexy Selfies?
Episode Date: February 6, 2023Dr Khandis Blake is an Evolutionary Social Psychologist at the University of Melbourne whose research focuses on status seeking, the menstrual cycle & sexual politics. It is no surprise that women try... to enhance their beauty, put on makeup, wear high heels and sometimes take off some layers for photos. But what predicts beautification? Is it all a product of the patriarchy or is it something else? Just why are women making all this effort? Expect to learn whether women condemn promiscuity more when they have sons, what predicts a high prevalence of sexy selfies, whether society has an incel problem, the relationship between makeup and female assertiveness, how income inequality motivates some very odd behaviour and much more... Sponsors: Get 10% discount on all Gymshark’s products at https://bit.ly/sharkwisdom (use code: MW10) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://www.drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Follow Khandis on Twitter - https://twitter.com/KhandisBlake Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → https://chriswillx.com/books/ To support me on Patreon (thank you): https://www.patreon.com/modernwisdom - Get in touch. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello friends, welcome back to the show. My guest today is Dr. Candice Blake,
she's an evolutionary social psychologist at the University of Melbourne, whose research focuses
on state-easeking, dimensional cycle, and sexual politics. It is no surprise that women try to enhance
their beauty, put on makeup where high heels and sometimes take off layers for photos, but what
predicts beautification? Is it all a product of the patriarchy, or is it
something else? Just why are women making all this effort? Expect to learn whether women condemn
promiscuity more when they have sons, what predicts a high prevalence of sexy selfies, whether society
has an in-sale problem, the relationship between makeup and female assertiveness, how income inequality motivates some very odd behaviors and much more.
This stuff, this intersectional competition thing is so interesting and kind of endlessly deep.
The number of different ways that we compete within our own sex to try and gain status or mates or resources or renown or prestige is pretty fascinating.
And I keep on finding more and more interesting researchers that have even more cool stuff to
tell us about. So here we go again. But now ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Dr. Candice Blake.
Why do women take sexy selfies?
Ah, we're starting in the big ones.
The big questions.
So this has been something that's been really fascinating
for me for a while, partly because I'm a woman, you know?
And I've been through all of those teenage years
and my 20s where beauty was really important to me.
And then I've kind of passed that and whilst beauty still is
important in your 30s as well, you know you just see so many women taking these selfies and it
seems to be so so important to them. And one of the kind of strongest arguments about this,
one of the most dominant arguments about this
is basically that women really care about their appearance, they really care about beauty
because of the patriarchy, you know, capital P. And the idea there is that gender oppression
leads women to value their bodies more than they value their other qualities.
And psychologists call that self-objectification, that's the kind of techy term for it.
And I think there is some trace to that.
There's certainly a bunch of people
who've been talking about it for many years.
But in my kind of opinion,
when I first started looking at this topic of research,
I thought that was doing a bit of a disservice to women.
Because from what I could see, having kind of been in that world
and having known many women in that world,
there was something really over competitive
about women engaging in sexy selfies
and beautifying their parents as well.
Like it didn't seem to me to be something
that was done to women,
but very much something that women were
owning and using quite strategically. So that's kind of the background of what had me start to look at that question and why I was so animated by it. And we have found in a range of different studies now, that women take sexy selfies to seek status.
But this is a status seeking thing.
You know, they're interested in gaining status in social hierarchies.
It can be a very agentic and assertive behaviour.
And that saying they're only doing it because they're pressed and the patriarchy tells them
they have to is really kind of only showing a small part of the picture of that kind of
motivation.
Are you suggesting that beautification and enhanced attractiveness and displays of
attractiveness are one of the primary methods through which women can gain status?
I wouldn't say it's a primary, well would I say it's a primary method? Let me think about that.
Yeah, I think I probably would actually, yeah, it's definitely a big way. And part of that is,
you know, part of that just has to do with our kind of cultural history, where for many women,
even to this day, your survival, your kind of flourishing relies on you marrying well,
because you can't necessarily hold much wealth for yourself. So in that case, looking attractive really
helps because we know that men tend to prefer, or else being equal, a more beautiful partner
to a less beautiful partner. I mean, I don't think we need to get up in arms about that.
It's a kind of a pretty logical decision. So partly I think the importance
of seeking status through beauty comes from that place.
But then there's something else about it
that's just unrelated to that dynamic as well,
which is humans have this tendency
to think highly of beautiful people.
More attractive people, they're more likely to get hired,
they're more likely to get job offers.
They have higher earning potential in general. It's something like 10 to 15% higher wages.
We think that they're smarter. They're not, right, but we think that they are. People have
this bias. We think they're smarter. We think they're generally good. We think they're
competent. And all of these kinds of stereotypes and biases we hold means that investing in your parents can be quite a smart move.
Why is it the case that for women, sexy selfies are a status-seeking mechanism?
If it's simply the case that this halo effect pretty privileged goes across the board, and yet for men we don't see,
I certainly don't see as many sexy selfies from my
guy mates as I do from my girl mates. Totally. So there's a couple of things
about that. The evidence that shows that we have these attractiveness biases,
some of that evidence is sex specific. So some of it is stronger for women, right?
So you see these effects manifest more for women than you do men, but not all of
them.
If you were going to do a blanket statement,
I would probably say maybe a third of them
are stronger amongst men.
And then the other two thirds, there's no sex difference.
So that you get the same effects for men as well.
I think there's two things to say on why
we see it more amongst women.
One is we do have that context of women
needing, you know, of women having in the past having to rely on beauty to get ahead, right? So
there's that. But then the other thing is men tend to have other ways of achieving status, right? And part of that is historical and part of that is
that in most cultures, pretty much all countries, I mean the vast majority of them,
men earn more than women do, earning is this really great way of producing status. And
if you look at what each sex is looking for in a mate, you find that every sex is,
you know, both men and both women and, you know, people who don't identify as either care about
mates that are kind, people generally want mates that are intelligent, compassionate people,
but as a blanket population level difference, men are more interested in
mates that are more attractive, and women are more interested in mates that have higher
status. So, men have these other ways of achieving status that aren't necessarily as easy for
women to achieve.
I suppose if you were to compare the number of car photos or watch photos that guys upload
online.
Big animal photos, so forget about those, hugging a tiger.
Yep, and that as well.
What are some of the things that you discovered
that can predict increases in sexy, self-fearing?
Yeah, so one, surprisingly, is an economic condition
of economic inequality.
So one of the things we did was we,
so I run a big data platform, right?
I'm really, I really love big data.
I think it's fun and exciting and yadda yadda yadda.
So I run this platform and we have three billion
geolocated tweets that we designed the algorithm
to geolocate, they span 10 years.
And we use it to try and understand trajectories
of attitudes and kind of cultural trends. And one of the first things we did with that
was look at sexy selfies, right? So by being able to take this kind of big geolocated
social media data, and we have data for every country in the world, and look at the prevalence
of something like sexy selfies across these different countries and regions. We can then link that data to population level data about that country,
things like its degree of gender inequality, right? Its degree of income inequality.
Its sex ratio, which is, you know, the ratio of men to women, which is this indicator of reproductive
competition, income, education, all these kinds of things.
So we did this investigation and we found that sexy selfies happen a lot more in environments
that are economically unequal.
We also looked at gender inequality and we found that consistent with that dominant
argument, we did find a gender inequality effect, meaning that sexy selfies happened more
in places that were gender unacquall. Just for the people that don't know what does gender
inequality mean? That would be like how much more men and women earn, how many more
how much more men earn than women earn, how many more parliamentary seats men hold, like a men considered leaders in society more than women, and do they have more power?
So you could kind of think of that gender inequality metric as being an indication of
the power of the patriarchy, right? High gender inequality, stronger patriarchal power.
And consistent with that argument,
we initially found this gender inequality effect, right?
But once you put income inequality into that analysis,
the gender inequality effect disappears.
And that may sound a little like
a bit of kind of academic statistic mumbo jumbo, what's the real difference,
it's all inequalities, but it's actually really important. Because what it's doing is saying
that sexualisation is not actually in these data at least, manifesting from this kind
of patriarchal pressure where men force women to beautify, it's actually manifesting as a result of a state of
the economy that has people want to strive to do better to out-compete their peers to keep up with
the joinsers. So it's linking beautification with state-of-seeking and not with the patriarchy.
with the patriarch. Wow, okay.
Why do you think that that's the case?
Yes.
So, I think that in evolutionary psychology, in gender psychology, you know, in academia
in general, we tend to underestimate the importance
of status seeking amongst women.
There is a quite dominant discourse about why status is important for men, you know,
we talked about a little of it, like status is important for men to seek mates.
Obviously, status is important for money. Money is important for everybody and
money is important for reproduction as well. So, you know, we tend to know that men are
interested in status, but there's been this disagreement and this kind of neglect of
the importance of status for women. I think that's...
There's definitely an element of that whereby any discussion of the more vicious sides of femininity
are kind of swept under the rug that's not really something that women do. There is a little
bit of a culture at the moment that masculinity is not something that should be pushed too much
further forward, which means the subtext of that anything which is more feminine should be
something which is promoted. Yeah, exactly. I think that's one of the reasons why. I mean, I've had Joyce Beninston, Tanya Reynolds,
Candice, Christine Duranty, a bunch of different people on the show recently, all of whom are
saying the same thing, which is, and for me, female intracexual competition is way, way
more interesting than male intracexual competition, because it's so much, you guys are just like vicious
and cunning and nuanced and brutal.
It's great.
But very nice on top of all of that
over the on the outside.
Sexy selfies as well.
So, you know, it's great.
Yeah, yeah, I, I, it fascinates me as well, you know?
And I, I think, you know, that, that,
that this idea that women aren't ferociously competitive is just plan wrong. We compete in a different way than what people have traditionally considered to be competition.
Status gives us different benefits.
It doesn't mean it's not really critically important, though.
Okay, so status amongst women is important.
Economic inequality predicts sexy self-eating. Women are using beautification as a tool to drag
themselves out of a situation in which there is increased economic inequality. Let me
bro signs, presumably because they can see where they could get to because they're exposed to the heights of good
economics, but they are also exposed to what happens if they slip a couple of wrongs down the ladder and that is a motivation to say you do not want to go down there
You do want to go up there?
What are the tools that I have at my disposal? I have a camera and a phone and an Instagram account
my disposal, I have a camera and a phone and an Instagram account allowed the selfies to occur.
Yeah, you nailed it.
That's basically exactly what we argue is happening.
Now, I think there's a one point to make about that, which is that effect of economic inequality
on wanting to seek status is something that you see about both men and women, right?
So this is a pop, amongst everybody, even rich people in economically unequal
environments get more worried about status, presumably because they were worried about losing status.
So, every economic inequality makes everyone across the board want to seek status. But what you're
seeing amongst women and particularly women for whom beauty is a form of capital, right, is that they invest in that to try and get ahead.
I think that there's two kind of main pathways it could help them get ahead. One is the more
obvious one if they could use it to attract a high quality mate, right, or in this case,
that would be a rich well-off man in this economically-unique world. But the other is all those other
biases and stereotypes that we discussed about why beauty
benefits people is that they could use it to build social capital, right?
People want to be friends with beautiful people.
It allows you to move in the right social circles.
We know that moving in the right social circles can have really important ramifications.
It can help you build networks. It can and things can be
say I'm sex and other sex networks. It can also have you create advocates and protectors
around you. And you know, I know that these effects are going to be sledge hammer effects
where all of a sudden I put on lipstick and like 10 people are running to me going, how can I advocate for your interests, Candice?
I mean, this is not that strong, right? So I've got to remember that this is a subtle kind of finding.
It doesn't mean it's not meaningful, though, and it doesn't mean that it's not strategic and savvy
to invest in that. Yeah, these 1% all the way up. I tell you what, I'd love to look at the,
I'd love to get David Putzen to get him to do his study about male vocal pitch.
And I wonder if men speak in a lower vocal tone in areas of higher economic inequality.
I bet they do. I wonder if they do. And amongst beautiful women as well,
why do I feel like you know you've looked at that already? I don't know if he looked at that amongst beautiful women thing,
but you'd expect that some kind of environment
that is increasing make competition could result in that kind of
fact.
He told me this story about when he was at uni,
before he'd even started doing his big studies
on vocal pitch and stuff.
And apparently he was stood in the queue at the supermarket and he could hear
these two guys behind him and they were speaking.
And he thought he was gonna turn around
and find two jazz singers or two sort of old guys
that were smoking cigars or something
because their voices were so low
and he turned around to find a pretty attractive girl
in between him and two
guys that were in their 25s. It was a case that these two guys were trying to
signal or auditory signal dominance to this girl. Look at how big my vocal folds
are. Look at all my voice goes. Okay, so that's how income inequality impact
sexy selfies, but it also has to impact female
intracexual competition in other ways as well.
What else have you learned?
Okay, so we have looked at sexualization and what else have we looked at?
Cosmetic use?
Cosmetic use here we have.
So one of the things that we were keen on in that study was not just showing the effect
online, right?
Because social media is its own world.
And we assume that what's happening online reflects what's happening offline, but it's
always good to kind of test that assumption.
So we looked at women's purchasing of beauty products as well amongst all the states in
the US where we had really good kind of data on that.
And then we looked at beauty salons and I think it was, yeah, it was beauty salons and cosmetics.
So these two are the kind of indicators.
And we also found that in cities in the US that were more economically unequal, in counties
in the US that were more economically unequal, that people were spending more money in women's
beauty salons and more money
on women's cosmetics and women's beauty products. So we kind of replicate the effect there as well
consistent with physical appearance and beauty becoming really important in these areas.
And you saw that beautification increased assertiveness too?
Yeah, so a lot of my work is on beauty, you know. It's been a kind of long journey for me partly.
I think this is because I grew up in a family where my mum had been a fashion model.
My dad had been a fashion model and then my brother was a fashion model, right?
I was not a fashion model, had no resentment about it, of course, I'm completely over it.
However, it's had me become really interested in beauty.
And so we did these other studies where we had women come into the lab and we
prepped them for this, right? So we gave them all these instructions and we told them
they either had to come into the lab bringing everything they would wear if they were going to go on a hot day.
Make up, hair, tools, the app.
What tools are women bringing? Are they bringing like a fucking power drill or something? What have they got with them?
Curling ions, straightness, straightness.
Oh, I see. beautification tools. Not DIY tools.
No, No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No or they had to come in bringing spending time at home with mates stuff, right?
And then they came into the lab and we gave them half an hour or 20 minutes to
get ready in preparation for the hot day or the hanging out with friends.
We gave them a cubicle and it was all locked and a mirror, full length mirror.
We also gave them additional makeup, should they not have had a lot of money for
makeup, but secretly super one and red lipstick. We gave them additional makeup. Should they not have had a lot of money for makeup, but secretly super-wanted red lipstick, we gave them stuff.
We said you didn't have to use it.
It's just there in case you would do it.
But we emphasised you've got to do what you would actually do for a hot date.
Don't do what you think we want you to do.
Do what you would do.
Then they came out of that room and we did these experimental tests on them.
To see whether they were
feeling more assertive after doing that.
So we did what's called a kind of self-report test where we just asked them explicit questions
on a computer monitor.
It's all done privately, but we might ask them how much get up and go, they feel like they
have, how assertive they feel they are,
how interested they would be in promoting themselves, that kind of thing.
But then we also do these implicit tests.
And these are computerized tests that look to the participant like they're measuring
word associations and reaction times.
So it literally looks like you're staring at a computer screen,
words flash up on a screen, and you have to press a button
to categorize that word into its most relevant category.
And we had categories related to assertiveness,
right, an agency, which is this assertiveness-related concept,
and in a high, so high assertiveness
and lower assertiveness. And then they've these words flash up on the screen like go getter,
you'd put go getter in the assertiveness category. And then other words flash up on the screen like lazy
and you'd categorize lazy into the non assertiveness category. And all that's well and good,
that's really just to train people that they know what the task does.
But then we have their name flash up on the screen.
And we have the word may flash up on the screen.
And they have to do this in split seconds,
and they have to go, oh, and they have
to categorize their name as high assertiveness
or lower assertiveness.
And we do this hundreds of times
to make the test statistically valid.
And then we're able to use that as this other indicator hundreds of times to make the test statistically valid.
And then we're able to use that as this other indicator of assertiveness, you know, on the
implicit level and these implicit tests are good because a lot of research has shown
you can't fake them, right?
You can't tell people what they want to hear.
You just have to react kind of intuitively.
And after running this study, we found that women who were in the hot date condition,
who had had to put on the clothes and put on the makeup and do whatever they were doing for a hot
date, felt more assertive. They rated themselves as more assertive, they were implicitly more assertive.
And that was this other indicator that this kind of strategic beauty strategy can leave women
feeling more assertive as well.
When it comes to thinking about all of this, one of the things that you haven't, you mentioned
it earlier on about the sex ratio, have you looked at the proliferation of beautification
and sexy selfies in connection with what the local ecology sex ratio is?
Yeah, we did look at it in local ecology sex ratio is?
Yeah, we did look at it in terms of sex ratio and we've looked at this twice.
So the first time we looked at it alongside
that sexy selfie study and we didn't find an effect there.
So it didn't seem to matter what the sex ratio was,
whether they were more men in the environment
or women in the environment,
just reliably there was just not a disdain manner. And then we also did an experimental study where we had participants do an online experiment where we primed them for different sex ratios.
And how we did that is we, I think this was people in the US signed up to do the study.
We found out where they lived, they gave us their county, right?
And then we used that information to automatically create an infographic, like a mini poster,
right?
Kind of the sort that you would see your government produce about maybe how much men and
compared to women and why we should re-address gender inequality. the sort that you would see your government produce about maybe how much men and compared
to women and why we should re-address gender inequality. We had this poster and the poster
talked about the number of men versus women in their environment. And we did kitschy things
like talk about the number of fish in the sea. And then we wrote fake news articles where
can people were complaining about there being a man drought or a woman drought.
And we gave fake statistics about there being only five, you know, five men available for
every one woman or the opposite way around.
Basically, we did all these different manipulations to give people
the impression that their environment was a good dating environment, right? Lots of opportunity
or a poor dating environment, lots of competition. And then we measured women's interest in
physical appearance and using physical appearance to get ahead and we found now a fit there either. Wow, I would not have predicted that given all of the
stuff that sex ratio hypothesis would predict things to do with short-term
mating, fewer dates before sex more in all of that stuff. I don't know why that
wouldn't cross over into the digital realm. I'm gonna guess that that's why you
probably had another crack at it to see if there was something in there
because it makes so much sense
before you actually get into the data.
Yeah, well, we thought the same thing.
I was really surprised.
And the more I thought about it though
and the more I looked into it,
I came up with some potential reasons
why we may not have found that effect.
One of them is that the sex ratio literature
mainly looks at sex ratio at a population level.
It's very rare that it's experimentally manipulated.
So usually what you do is you actually take
the real sex ratio in a place
and then look at real outcomes in a place.
And that's well and good and that has some strengths,
but it leaves open that kind of
correlational analysis leaves open the possibility that there is some other predictor that is not
being measured that could account for that finding.
An experimental test is really the kind of strongest test you can do of trying to find
the relationship between something and very few studies have looked at sex ratio experiments.
So that was one thing.
But then the other thing is, you know, these sex ratio effects tend to be stronger amongst
men than they do amongst women.
And what I mean by that is the sex ratio tends to affect male behaviour more than it does
female behaviour.
And I wonder if that's, I think that may have to do with this biological trade-off between quality and quantity.
Right, so when people are interested in, well, not really when people are interested because
these kinds of motivations happen in the background, but the motivation to mate, for a male is benefited by, in a lot of ways, by quantity. There's no kind of cap for male reproductive success.
So in one framework, you know, from one point of view, is a male is able to go and just kind of sleep with as many women as possible.
Some of them are going to get pregnant. And if he sleeps with 100 women, multiple of those women get pregnant,
that's going to be more of a benefit
to his reproductive success than finding one super awesome,
really high quality woman and just sleeping with her.
And I'm talking purely numbers, right?
Obviously, there's a lot more complex things going on.
I'm not saying all men do that, all that, they should do do that, but from a numbers perspective that's what's going to benefit my
reproductive success. From the phenol perspective it's very different. Having sex with multiple men
is not going to increase your reproductive success necessarily. You're limited by the costs of
pregnancy, lactation, you know, that's that's I that that's, that can take 9, 10, 11, 12,
two years, right? So quantity is not necessarily the important thing there. The important thing
is quality. So the operational sex ratio, that is an indication of quantity, right? The
number of men or the number of women you have available. And I think that we may find these lesser effects
amongst women because that quantity distinction
is just not so relevant.
That's interesting.
It's not not anyway.
Yeah, would it not be the case that in an area
that has more men, there is a greater chance
of you finding a higher quality man.
Let's say that there are 10 men out of every 100
that you would be prepared to get into
a relationship with, but now there's a thousand men.
Oh, well, now there's a hundred men that I would be prepared to get into a relationship
with.
I have no idea how that would affect behavior.
I can see why, given that men are playing a numbers game and women are playing a quality
game, a manipulation of the numbers in the local ecology in terms of sex ratio would result
in managing their behaviour more than women, but fundamentally the pool of quality men
is impacted by the volume of men also. And given that women are more picky, maybe that
compensates in some sort of a way as well. It is very, very interesting.
One of my other favorite things that I saw you look at was social inequalities affecting
conflict between the sexes.
And this is something that I've been pretty obsessed with, this sort of mating crisis
that's occurring at the moment, the difficulties that poor men and richer women are having.
What did you find in these models?
Yeah, so this was, I think what you're talking about
is a simulation study that we ran.
So this was a study that I did with my collaborators,
Rob Brooks and Woods from Arche.
And Woods is an excellent modeler.
And he, one of the things that he does
is run these simulation studies.
So for those who are unfamiliar with it, a simulation study is purely kind of a mathematical
hypothetical, right?
So what you do is you put people in that you, they're not people, right?
So you mathematically create actors in a hypothetical environment
and then you can assign those actors a particular property, right? Like wealth. And then you can
assign the environment a particular property. And in this case, we assign those actors incomes, so wealth, right?
And then we manipulated it to create inequality in that environment,
both in terms of income inequality, just generally.
Some people will really rich, some people will really poor, some actors.
And then gender inequality.
So actors that we assign to be female, less actors. We assign to be male or vice versa
And we manipulated that across a number of different dimensions. So you have a lot of in a lot of income inequality
Just a little bit of income inequality a lot of gender inequality or maybe you've got
Perfect gender equality or even the reverse where you see women earn more than men
So we played around with all these different metrics.
And then what you do in that simulation is you basically kind of press go and iteratively
over, I think we did 100 simulation.
I think we had a million individuals and 100 simulations.
You can measure a particular behavior in that environment and see how those metrics
affect that behaviour.
So we were interested in pairing success, which we kind of just were and we are interested
in pairing success under hypergany.
So hypergany is this general rule that you see across pretty much all human societies where women tend to marry up. You call it hypergany
but other people call it hypergamy. What's the difference between those two?
Yeah, so that kind of used interchangeably. hypergany is women, you know,
gyny, women marrying up. hypergamy is, oh, sorry, hypergamy is just women kind of
pairing up.
Gamy more has to do with marrying up.
So they kind of, they kind of mean the same thing
that people talk about them in different contexts.
Okay.
So we use this simulation model to try and understand
what was the success of pairing for male actors
versus female actors in this environment, depending on what they earned and what other people
earned.
And it was a complicated paper, but there was some really two take-away points.
One take-away point is there are consistently these groups in society
that are disadvantaged in terms of pairing success. And it doesn't matter if individuals
in these groups are lovely kind individuals. Pairing success will be harder for them based
on the economy in society. And those two groups of people, the first is poor men.
Probably no surprises there, and we can talk about that.
But the second is rich women.
And that one usually people do find quite surprising.
And what we see is that those two groups do quite badly
at pairing when there is any form of gender equality, right?
Those two groups do worse when there is gender inequality.
So if you kind of think how the status quo used to be, those two groups do better.
And when there is income inequality, those two groups, especially men, do even worse than
they were going to do before.
Hmm.
So I understand the first two.
I understand why in an environment that has relative gender equality, if women are women
on average want to date a man that's as rich or richer than they are, if there is an ever
decreasing pool of men that are across and above from them, they've got the tall girl problem, right? There are fewer,
fewer men that they can date. Exactly. I understand how the reverse of that would mean that men,
even poor men, are doing better than women because some of those women on average are
just generally poorer overall. So it gives men a stepping stone, it gives them
a raise up, which makes it easier for poor men to be that hypergamous sort of above and
across male to women, even if it's lower down women. The income inequality thing, I don't
understand at all, and I need you to explain.
Yeah, so it's kind of like what we're talking about with those sexy selfies, right? And
in those economically unequal environments, people can see the benefits of perhaps delaying
pairing now by waiting to pair with an individual of higher status later.
And what that means is you've got this kind of incentive operating in that marketplace that is when mating is hypergones is just making things worse.
So I mean this is the fundamental quandary that I've been playing around with for the last
year and a half also. Given the fact at the moment that the trends suggest two women for every one man
completing a full year US college degree by 2030, men are dropping out of the US labour force
at 0.1 per month since the 1950s and it's going to dip to 65% labour force participation by 2050,
50.1% of women childless by 30, 45% of 22 to 44-year-old prime working age women will
be single by 2040 according to, I think it was right, as are somebody like that.
What do you, as a woman who is successful and has a PhD and all the rest of it?
What do you see in the future as a potentially useful way to frame this,
not whether it be conversation with the public or potential policy implications,
or just cultural interventions and technologies,
like mimetic interventions that we can do to try and make this easier?
Because it sucks for women that given the fact
that they've only just reached educational and employment parity, that they're now basically facing a world where for every pound extra
that they earn their dating prospect get worse, and for every degree that they get, they're
finding it harder to get married, and also men being forgotten and alone and retreating
into porn and video games that rates greater than ever before, that if one sex loses,
both sex is lose, right? And as far as I can see, sexlessness is increasing amongst
men. I'm sure you've seen the stats about tripled since 2008 to 2018, blah, blah.
It's not good for anybody at the moment, right? And yet, saying women have you considered
being a little bit less educated or economically independent, it'll make your dating prospect better, not a campaign that is going to be particularly successful
for any politician to run on. Right. You must have considered this current sort of cultural
challenge that we face given the ground truth of hypergamy. So what do you think?
Yeah, so I think I tend to be a little less worried about the
future in all honesty. I don't doubt those statistics that you
said, but I think that, you know, my understanding of the way
that these dynamics play out is it's always an arms race, right?
So each sex is kind of competing to do the best that they can in
the environment that they are in.
And we're very plastic, you know, we're very phenotypicly plastic.
We respond, we alter our behaviour to suit our environment, we adapt.
And there are some big questions about how fast we adapt, but I think in a lot of these
kinds of, in this particular discussion, I think that people are just going
to find a way. That pressure to, that pressure to mate is such a strong one. I think people
are going to find a way to do it. Now, my, you know, what I've often said to women when
I talk to women in this position and it usually tends to women who are a little more educated, who are then shocked that they're
at a disadvantage, right?
They just say, like, well, that was my experience, but everybody just told me that I was making
things up, or that I was just not seeing the people that are available, and I'm like,
well, no, you are statistically at a disadvantage.
So the one thing that I think Hypergany may relax to some extent, and it tends to have
done so in terms of education.
So what you are finding is that as women are getting more educated, their preferences
for men who are more educated than themselves have started to relax.
The income one is still a strong one, but it's hard to test the strengths for that,
whilst we still have gender inequality and income, right?
Because whilst there is gender inequality and income,
there is always gonna be an incentive,
if you're a woman, to pair with a man who was richer than you.
That incentive will always exist.
So I think that we're going to continue to see
that degree of hypergamy in terms of income continue.
Now for men, particularly for these poor men who are in this worst prospect,
it's a really tough one, right? I, I,
making that kind of argument of, well, we should try and have women be less educated,
it's just not going to work, right? And particularly
doing it in a way that you seem resentful and aggressive and anti-woman is not going to appeal to
any women that you might want to attract. But at the same time, to then ignore this group of men
and say, oh well, you should just toughen up and don't complain about it, is absolutely
the wrong thing to do. And one of the things that we have kind of advocated for and tried
to speak about is that we need to find a way to support these young men without just telling
them that what they're seeing in the market is inaccurate, or that because men in general
tend to receive lots of benefits that their gripes and their issues are something that we should ignore. How we do that in
reality is a tricky question. One, this is a bit of an indirect approach, is
one is, you know, income inequality is something we consistently come back to
being a problem. One is we could try and challenge income inequality. I
authentically think that would make a really big difference. Particularly amongst men's competition with other men,
and that would help these worse off individuals.
Another indirect kind of pathway is,
maybe we work with those men to give them something else
that they can offer to a romantic relationship
that's not as important as income.
Maybe we train them in being excellent parents.
I mean, I know that seems like a bit of an odd thing to say, but if women are looking
for at a population level, taking care of their resources, right?
And then wanting to be able to pair with someone who can be a good parent.
If these men are really finding it difficult to handle that resource issue because they
disadvantage in particular ways, or maybe they just don't have interest to go and be a stock if these men are really finding it difficult to handle that resource issue because they're
disadvantaged in particular ways or maybe they just don't have interest to go and be a
stock broker, they just want to do something else, which is completely legitimate.
Maybe we find them a way that they can advertise their prowess as parents, you know, and we
can invest in that way.
I mean, these are some potential things.
Absolutely.
I mean, I've played with a bunch of these solutions. I'm trying to come up with
them. Pedestalizing motherhood and fatherhood is definitely one of them because it steps outside
of this existing sort of hypergamous relationship and takes us into this sort of more familial thing,
a familial setting in which characteristics like kindness, attentiveness, humor, goodwill,
grit, determination, conscientiousness that's
not being driven to what a capitalists end. All of those are able to come out in a really good way.
However, it is currently very low status to be a state-home dad. I mean, it's not exactly
personalized to be a state-home mum, but it's definitely not personalized to be a state-home
dad. So I think that that may be a little bit of a no-pill battle, but it's definitely not pedestalized to be a stay-at-home dad. So I think that that may be a little bit
of an uphill battle, although it's not something
that I would be too averse to seeing.
Totally right, trying to claw back women's recently
achieved parity in education employment
is not even going to begin getting anywhere.
Raising up men, I really don't know what that means. Although I would love to do it,
I speak to guys, everybody that's listening to this podcast that is a guy, is already outside
of that bucket of people. They're super agentic, they've got sovereignty, they're trying to
improve themselves, they can consume it 45 minutes into a conversation about very complex gender
dynamics, right? Like they know what they're doing. It's the group that aren't, and oddly that's the strange thing,
that the people that would benefit most from listening to podcasts like this one are the people
that aren't listening to it, which is a little bit unfortunate. One of the things that I am,
I don't know whether it's hopeful or not for is trying to encourage both men and women
to see each other as adversaries anymore.
I think that trying to have a collaborative conversation between the two sexes would make
things a lot easier.
I think that another stat which I picked up last year from Seth Stevens' Davidowitz' book,
Don't Trust Your Gut, is a man who works in hospitality and earns $300,000 a year,
is the same level of attractiveness as a firefighter or a lawyer that earns $60,000 a year.
So basically, there is a $240,000 disparity because status, especially from employment,
can be conveyed in more ways
than just your monetary contribution.
Now, the problem is, in relationships
where the woman is the primary bread winner,
their twice is of 50% more likely to end in divorce,
and if the woman contributes more than 80%
of the household income,
their twice is likely to end in divorce.
Women are roughly three times more likely than men to say that they would value
the resource acquisition of their partner because men just don't care about that from a partner.
However, women do.
So I don't know. One thing that Seth didn't look at is, yes, men are able to switch job titles
and become more attractive without having to earn necessarily any more money,
but he didn't work out what happens if your wife earns a hundred grand and you go from
300 to 60, I think that crossing that income threshold is actually going to be
kind of like a floor, a hard floor that if you fall through, you're going to start to see some weird
externalities, no matter how sexy you look in your firefighters outfit. Absolutely agree with you on that one.
It's an interesting one.
You know, another thing that I think that we need to pay attention to is the ramifications
that these mating market conditions can have at a societal level as well.
So we need to be, let's take the poor men situation.
So we need to be aware of the situation for those individuals.
What it is like for those individuals faced in that kind of market.
We need to be aware of things like amongst the in-self population, for example, who are often associated with
this group of well-who-self proclaimed disadvantaged in the mating market. One of the things we
see in that particular sub-population is huge rates of mental health problems, right?
Huge rates of neurodivergence, autism, depression, anxiety that are, you know, double the rates even more.
Just to-
Just to-
Just to put it out there, we're not suggesting that not having sex causes you to be
autistic.
We're suggesting that a lot of people that are autistic and neurodivergent tend to be
in sales, yeah.
Yes, that's right, yeah.
So, you know, we need to be sensitive and aware of those kinds of barriers as well, and
I think it can be easy to just go
Well, it's sex whatever I like we should be focusing on people's
On other fundamental life motivations, but for many many people
Sex is very very very very important to them and not just very important at a head of elastic
I like getting my rocks off kind of way important important in terms of who I value myself to be. My self worth. My self worth.
My, my, you know, my one of the things that motivates me to be living and feel like I am
really especially as a man, my masculine validity. Yes. Right. And I think for far too long now we have just ignored that as something that
is deserving of time and attention. But so that would be the first thing is the importance of
what it's like for those individuals. The other thing is the massive ramifications that it can have
for international security when you start to mess with mating market dynamics, right?
And what that can cause for the prevalence of war, what that can cause for the prevalence
of increased violence, theft, property crimes in general.
And if you're Valerie Hudson, who is a political scientist in Texas A&M, has done a lot of
work on this and so has Rosemite Dermott, who's
over at Brown, and they have shown that these mating market obstructions where it's very
hard for young men to marry, particularly in areas that are polygenous, right? So that
one man has many wives and what that does is favor rich men who can afford many wives. It means that
who can afford many wives. It means that I think in Afghanistan right now the rate of buying a wife, because it's that kind of bride price environment you have to buy a wife. The
rate of buying a wife is so expensive that only one son in each family, unless they're
very ritual, ever be able to afford it, and all of the other sons, and these are environments which favor sons, so people tend to have more sons afford it and all of the other sons and these are environments
which favour sons so people tend to have more sons and daughters. All of the other sons
will never marry. They just have to work to make sure that the elder son can marry. I mean,
imagine being one of those guys, right? You're never going to find a wife. You're never going to earn
enough money to find a wife. Your elder brother, if you give him all your money, will find a wife.
And that's what your family culture has to do.
Now, then imagine a group like the Taliban comes along,
and I'm simplifying a little, but not that much.
A group like the Taliban comes along
and says, we need to get women out of education.
We need to, I'll give you money,
it will be religiously righteous,
and we're gonna get women out of education,
and we're gonna give you a wife wife if you join our insurgency and
join our course. And all of a sudden in these environments you have these men
presented with completely bleak mating market prospects and then presented
with a group that tells them we'll get girls out of education which for these
uneducated men is a no-brainer. Why would you want girls being uneducated if
you're an uneducated man and and you know that educated women won't be interested in you? Then they tell you
we'll give you a job and we'll give you money, right? Okay, well that's a no-brainer. And you know,
part of these dynamics is they're fueling these very, very problematic international security
dilemmas to do with warfare, to do with terrorism, to do with violence.
And then we kind of ignore that structure or consequence as well.
Wasn't there something in medieval Portugal where the first sun, there was so few women,
sex ratio was split in a particular way, that the first sum of the only one that could get a wife,
or maybe it was a gerontocracy, or maybe there was some barons that had captured all of the
hot young women or something, and they just shipped all of the other younger sons. First
son, fantastic, you're laughing, you get family and wife, all of the other sons, what they did in order
to be a pressure release valve for this latent sexual frustration was they sent
them off on gallion ships and they said, go explore the new world, you can go be pirates
of the sea, you can go do all of this stuff. So they literally exported every man that
wasn't the first son in a desperate attempt to try and tune down this young male syndrome.
So okay, we've spoken about
what's happening in countries where the, no matter what you think about the West, the gender inequality
is worse, right? It's not as bad over here as it is over there. Do you think that the West has an
in-sale problem in terms of societal stability and security? I think the world has an in-sell problem. I'm giving
you my intuition on this because there's very poor quality data on it, but my intuition
on it is that what we're talking to, what we're calling in-sells in the West, is prevalent
in all different environments,
which may not use that term.
And in those environments, they may not be vocal on English, social, media, and use hashtags
to do with in cells.
But that underlying sentiment of disgruntled, aggrieved young men who have poor prospects
of finding a date and the likelihood of those men engaging in kind of societal
disruption, I think, is evident everywhere.
Okay, so I have a theory. This is the first time I've actually...
Almy.
It's the first time I've been able to talk about it since I put a name to it, and it wasn't
me that put a name to it, who's Vincent Haranam and William Costello. It's Williamson's
sedation hypothesis. So I noticed in one of your papers that you said, physical violence is rare, a rare but
growing problem between 2014, 2018 reactionary in sales killed 50 people across North America
and Europe.
So that's 50 people too many, shouldn't have happened.
One of them in 2020 or 2021, having on the
South Coast of England, almost all of the killings that you do see when it comes to mass shootings
that occur in schools, when it comes to jihadi terrorists that come over there, almost all,
you know, categorized as in-sales. However, given the here-to- unforeseen and unknown levels of sexlessness amongst young men,
we definitely should have presumed that we would have had tons and tons more in-cell killings.
Where are all of the killings at? Is a question that I've been asking myself,
and it is my current neuroscience belief that men are being sedated out of their
status seeking and sexual frustration behaviour with porn and video games. So this is Diana
Fleishman's Uncanny Vulver's theory that she's got about porn and you can see easily enough
what happens with video games. So a ton, I saw some data the other week that said,
nearly a third of unemployed men who are between the ages of 18 and 30 are spending
their time, spending over 2,000 hours per year playing video games, and of that group, there
is a huge number that are on either prescription or recreational drugs while they do it.
And my point being that if it's true that young male syndrome in 2023 is happening in the same way as it would have done in previously unstable societies where the
stex ratio or the mating market gets messed up, all of these young men, why are they not running around graffitiing stuff and pushing overgranny? Like where are they all? This isn't a call to arms for them to start doing stuff. It is good.
Yep.
It is me saying, it's simply not there.
The stat straight up are not that you could have,
it could be like, it could have been diluted down by one tenth
and you would have still seen a significant increase.
2008 to 2018, 8% to 28% of men having no sex
in the last year between the ages of 18 and 30, which is that age
that would cause this trouble.
And that finishes in 2018,
roll COVID on top of that, roll pathogen risk
and increase levels of disgust and blah, blah, blah,
social anxiety, all of this.
I honestly think it could be over 50% of men
walking down the street, maybe 40%.
If you pointed a man on the street,
a one in two chance that if he's between the ages
of 18 and 30 hasn't had sex in the last year
That is such a huge increase in the state of
Less than two decades
There should be more of these troubles and there isn't and it seems that porn use and video game use are the two easiest
Outlets for that camaraderie state of of seeking, vast oppressing dopamine behavior,
and they're getting some, it's not quite reproductive fitness signals, but it's good enough.
It's a titrated dose, Williamson's sedation hypothesis.
Yeah, look, I really like it. I think the sedation word is just such a beautiful term in this one,
right? And it actually reminds me of some work that I did with this.
So I've done a little bit of work with an evolutionary biologist, Mike Kasumovich.
And he has looked at violent video games and how they relate to make value
and whether playing violent video games can give you this kind of boost of making,
making, making, make you feel like you're more of a dude, right? Like you're more of a man,
you've got high mate value and he actually does find a fixed consistent with that. But then he
also finds these things where if you lose a game, particularly if you lose a video game to a woman
and you're a guy, you're super unhappy about it. You're like more aggressive, you're more of a jerk,
but if you lose to a man, it's not so bad. And does a lot of his work on, or a lot of his initial
work was actually on spiders and on phenotypic plasticity in spiders and mating dynamics
and spiders, but he's a super interesting guy and now he does some human stuff. He talks
about that people are playing violent video games to practice dominance, right? Because
they're having trouble with dominance in the off the offline world, so maybe they use the online world to practice dominance. And I think that aligns nicely with your kind of hypothesis.
I also think that it would be simplistic to assume that the, and I know that you're not doing
this, but it would be simplistic to be able to think that the only outlet then from that kind
of mating disadvantage is societal disruption. So one of the things that has happened over time and over development is we've kind of,
our brains have developed, we've found other ways to try and resolve the issues that we face
and try and channel those kinds of problems into other ways. So I think that there is
that ability as well, how you would go about doing that other than, you know, potentially just
complaining to your mates is a really problematic question.
I've looked at correlations between local sex ratios and the state of the local mating
market and insolactivity online, misogynistic tweets, and then that downstream related into
domestic violence or domestic abuse and stuff like that too, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we, so we do find this correlation between offline and online behaviors there.
So one of the things we found was that, again, you know, consistent theme, income inequality
increases the likelihood of in-cell ideology.
It makes it more prevalent.
And we also find that when the advantage that men hold over women in terms of how much
they earn, so that kind of gender inequality effect, when that gap erodes, so when men and
women's earnings become closer and closer, there's more in cell ideology there as well.
And then in relation to the offline world, one of the things we tracked was the kinds
of misogynistic discourse that a lot of in cells engage in.
And we related that to domestic and family violence outcomes.
And we find that there is this predictive relationship where when the social media chatter
in a particular region becomes more misogynistic, what you find is that you start to see more
domestic and family violence in that area.
And you even see this predictive effect as well, where if misogynine increases one year,
right, next year, you'll see more domestic and family violence there as well.
And that's just a small effect.
But these lag effects kind of suggest that one of the things that societies could do,
this is a potential policy area.
One of the things that we could do at this is a potential policy area. One of the
things that we could do at a societal level is start to also track sentiment on social media
to try and understand and predict where offline behaviour is going to change later.
Right, we could track misogyny, we could start to track this insolidology, we could track people's
resentment and disgruntlement about the sexes and use that
information to then look at some of these more panicious crimes and the outcome of those
crimes later on.
And potentially then divert resources into those areas to try and rectify.
A head of time almost.
It's like being able to see the future.
So Seth, the guy that wrote Don't Trust Your Gut during COVID, during the first wave of COVID,
he was able using aggregated Google search data. He was able to predict where outbreaks were going
to occur three to five days before they did with greater accuracy than the CDC. And what he was doing
was he was using searches for things like, why can't I smell? Why is my temperature going
all over the case? Why can't I taste my food? He had a bunch of different search criteria
and sure enough it mapped on perfectly. So I'm all down for some whatever. What was that
thing where Tom Cruise was able to see the future?
What was that?
Minority report.
Minority report.
Don't want people arrested before it happens,
but you can prepare, you know,
compensatory facilities to maybe help people with stuff
if you could see things like that.
I was talking to William Costella before we came on,
and he has got some stuff from the paper
that hasn't even been released yet that I thought I would tell you about. He said I'm allowed to William Costella before we came on and he has got some stuff from the paper that hasn't even been released yet
I thought I would tell you about he said I'm allowed to do it.
Right.
In cells have a lower minimum mate preference than non-in cells.
So this disproves the in cells just have two high standards
idea that in cells have even lower standards than men of their same mate value that are not self identified as in cells.
So they lower their standards to try and compensate. And the other one, which is really interesting,
in cells and non-in cells, overestimate the importance that women say they place on
financial resources and physical attractiveness, but underestimate kindness, intelligence, and
humor. So this is what women say. So it stated not revealed preferences and the
un falsifiability of some areas of the insolidiology might say, well, you know,
I know what women like more than women do, and you go, well, I don't know, maybe,
but at least in this regard, they overestimated the importance that women said
that they placed on it, which becomes a little bit of a self-defeating situation, especially if you're a man that is in that poor cohort.
Yeah, it does, and I think at links to that real nihilistic view that some in cells have that they're never going to find any that black pill ideology of no matter what I do, I'm never going to be able to find a mate.
I've always found it really perplexing and what you've shared there kind of makes sense of that as consistent with
this. I've always found it really perplexing that there's this aspect of in-cell behaviour
that is so preoccupied with how men look, right?
LMS looks money-states.
Yes, looks maxing.
Right, right, and looks maxing, right?
So it's all about looks and the irony is, you know, when you look at the evolutionary psychology
literature, women don't care as much about looks as they do about status.
And this is what's made me kind of start to think about, it links back to women's use
of beauty, right, as well. I have this kind of intuition that for both sexes, that what you're
doing is trying to gain status in any way that you can, right? And different people have
different opportunities available to them. Some people have rich, fancy educations they
can get and they can flash and other people can have fancy cars and or some people can gain
the prestige within their social networks and
be very important amongst that social network.
But other people don't have those kinds of options available.
What they do have available to them is potentially working on their body.
And I think that amongst both sexes, what you may find is that in environments where people
don't feel they have many status opportunities available to them, they look at one of the
things that they could use to gain status and then they focus on their body
and that that might be why you see so much of that amongst in cell men as well.
Did you see, I don't know whether you follow William, but if you don't, you absolutely need to.
I do.
This was a tweet that he put up last week.
This is from Cypost.
Hetero-sexual women prefer men who are taller and have broader shoulders
and consider them more masculine and have better fighting ability.
Larger upper bodies boost attractiveness ratings for taller men.
They don't appear to have the same effect for shorter men.
Or is it here? According to this study, it didn't have the same effect in improving attractiveness
as it did for tall men.
However, I think slight muscularity
compared to fat flabbscrawnee will give even short men
a better chance.
I'll tell myself this as I do curls in the mirror
whether you move is a short king.
So he, I think he had a personal investment there.
However, yeah, I don't get it wrong.
We were talking about this as we were walking around me and my house
mate were walking around the park the other day discussing the fact that
is it easier for men or women to change their mate value?
Was the question in this modern mating world that we've got.
And I think I came up with the idea that I think men are more screwed as a group, but have it better
individually, and women are more screwed individually, but have it better as a group at the moment.
I think that any one man who manages to ramp up their conscientiousness and their motivation
for a little bit of time can easily add, you know, any average man can easily add
sort of two points onto probably that out of 10 make value, especially if they haven't
cared about it before. A little bit of work on yourself in the gym, some good new clothes,
work on career for a couple of years time, you know, you've started to gain a little bit
more income. You're that's relatively easy. I think that shy of cosmetic surgery, which has some resource limitations on it for women,
you are kind of bouncing off and up a bound and you are permanently from the age of 21,
permanently on a downhill slope, away from your peak sexual market value for most men,
right?
This isn't to say that some women don't like bloom and still look great into their forties
and stuff, but you know what I mean? My point being when it comes to as a group, I don't know how we fix this 19 percentage
point or 15 percentage point difference between men and women at universities at the moment
where you've got title nine was brought in, sorry title nine was brought in when women
were 15 percentage points behind men and it's now
19 percentage points in the other direction.
And I don't know how you fix that.
I don't know how you fix the sort of labor force dropouts and stuff for men.
Women I think it is harder for them individually to change their mate value.
I think that there are just fewer roots that are open to them.
However, if you look as a group, I think women overall have at least a little bit
of a brighter future in that both groups
are going to be alone for a little while.
On average, both groups are going to be increasingly alone,
but at least women can be rich and educated
while they're alone.
So that was my-
That was what you're thinking from.
Yeah, I don't know.
Look, I think both sexes have challenges.
And I don't know if I would say that it would kind of be easier or harder for each sex,
like my devil's advocate view would kind of go, yeah, but as a woman, you could still
be an absolute jerk and you could just find a great lipstick and, you know, a dress that
was particularly satisfying and some of that kind of slimming underwear and you could have
better share.
Spanked. Spanked. Spanked. Spanked. Spanked. spying and some of that kind of slimming underwear and you got a better spying there and as a guy it's going to take a long time to try and earn that kind of big bucks in
that economically unequal environment like sure kindness always helps. So I don't know, I think
both sexes have got disadvantages that we're playing with and both sexes have advantages and
one of the things that you mentioned earlier was you know you
think it would be helpful if people would stop being so antagonistic right
and you know both sexes are stop viewing the other sexes are problem and I
100% agree with that and one of the things that I think is actually the access
to that is having and I don't mean it's prescriptively, like people should just
go out and do this, though, that would be good, is having a decent understanding of how
this kind of evolutionary arms race stuff works. At a most basic level, everybody is trying
to do the best that they can, right? Everybody has strengths and everybody can be a jerk.
Both sexes, both women, both men, you know, both men and women.
We can all be absolute jerks and we can all be great and we're both doing the best with
every, with what we've got. And I, I don't know, this might be my, this might be my life
coaching background kind of getting in the way there, but I think the access to not demonizing
the other sex is understanding that you can be a real jerk as
well. It's okay, like it, it's, it's, if you can kind of look yourself in the
mirror and know that you can be a total jerk and that doesn't mean that you are a
total jerk, right? It just means that you can have those qualities and you can
also let those qualities go and soak in other people. I think that's a real
access to not making it the other sex
is problem. It's very moralistic. Very, very, very, you are this thing. Not you do this.
Not you behave in a particular way. It's you are this. It's like infused your spirit. You
fuck unlovable harpies or you like awful neckbearded in cells or whatever it is, right? That's the way that this gets framed.
And this is, I mean, this is my current pet obsession.
It's what I'm writing about most mornings.
It's, and also given that I'm coming into this world of,
you know, gender, dynamics, sex, market, imbalance, whatever,
on YouTube, which if you are talking about this
and you're a guy that looks like
me, you're spouting off about how women are these sort of awful coddled pieces of shit
who have absolutely no idea about what that make value is. And although there are some
kernels of truth to like the fundamental basis, it is taken and blown up to such a degree that
I think it's actually a negative to this discussion because it makes people both men
and women think that they have an understanding about what these evolutionary precepts are,
and it's wrong. So not only do you no longer have the learner's mind, which is great for
keeping you open to new things, you're closed off to any new evidence because you already
have your ideology, which has come out of whatever corner of the internet you believe is already right.
But now you're still dealing with the same problems and not prepared to make any changes.
So yeah, I think tuning down that adversarial relationship, and I see, you know, this isn't just the stuff that comes from guys,
like our slash female dating strategy. The pernicious thing about the advice for women
is that it comes from more mainstream outlets.
And it's real shit.
At least guys, if guys want to get shit advice,
they've got to go on the internet.
If girls want to get shit advice,
they just need to go to the news agent
because L and cosmopolitan will happily write articles
teaching women how to sleep with him and not catch feelings.
Hey, your article is teaching women how to disembodied themselves from letting another person inside of them so that they can what?
Claim that that's freedom. That doesn't sound particularly free to me. So that is definitely for women, they have that much worse.
I think that the mainstream dating advice for women and men is bad,
but men it's not harmful, men it's just useless.
Like women it's genuinely harmful.
Yeah, it makes it stopping reading Cosmopolitan and Nell and stuff like that.
I think it would make the world
a better place.
Final thing, final thing.
You used to do gender studies.
I did, yeah.
How do you go from doing gender studies
to being an evolutionary psychology scholar?
Yeah, look for me, it was a,
I think for me, so there's one thing I've always been open-minded, right? I'm a pretty open-minded individual and I did gender studies because I was
really passionate about gender issues and was the keen on figuring them out. And then I worked
as a life coach for in business coach for a bit and then I decided as a life coach for business coach
for a bit and then I decided to start doing psych
and I didn't even know evolutionary psychology existed
when I started doing my undergrad in psych.
And I started to, you know, in the first week of my PhD,
I went to a summer school
and it was run by the Society of Australasian
social psychologists and in this summer school, I sat in a workshop in Evolutionary Psychology and you know I'm sitting there and I'm super
excited to be there and I'm listening to the presenter start talking about sexual conflict.
I'm like okay yeah this is right down my alley I love this stuff. And then he started talking about
the evolutionary reasons of why we have such common patriarchal
backgrounds to so many different cultures.
Then he started talking about make value and pressures on appearance.
And I sat in the switch off and I was flabbergasted, right?
And after being flabbergasted, I then started to feel really pissed off. And I was pissed off not because there was this whole
framework that in biology to understand what I was so committed by. I was pissed off that I'd
spent an entire gender studies degree looking at it and no one had told me about it.
I was like, I was not doing gender studies to be kind of pigeonholed into only looking at one framework to try and solve this issue.
I was committed to trying to rectify sexual politics
and make a difference to sexual harmony.
I don't care what framework you throw at me.
If the framework's gonna make a difference,
I wanna hear about it.
And it got me really rolled up.
And in kind of presenting it that way,
it makes it sound like I think
that the problem's only in gender studies and that only gender studies is closed to other views makes it sound like I think that the problems only
in gender studies and that only gender studies is close to other views and I don't think that.
I think that both biological camps and sociocultural camps can be close to alternative views
and my kind of flag in the ground from that point onwards was that I was always going to find
a way to combine nature and nurture frameworks that in the topics I cared about
you had to do both and I really just made it my business to do both ever since.
And I find it really satisfying, I mean it's challenging because you kind of
sit in this crossroads where you're kind of not really part of either camp and
you are a little bit but then they always judge whether you're really part of
the camp in the right ways. But that crosswords works for me. You know,
I tend to be a little more controversial. I don't mind sitting at the crossroads and I think
ultimately at a values level, I really authentically believe you've got to be accounting for both
biology and culture. And really if you truly understand understand biology you know that culture is part of the biology.
So yeah, I sit in both worlds. What do you think most gender studies scholars misunderstand
about human nature? I think that they I think that they misunderstand how plastic everything is
and that and what I mean by that is how
responsive we are to what's going on in the environment.
I think that they believe that culture can be separated from biology.
I think they believe that I don't think they understand really what an arms race is.
I mean, I'm sure they could define it, right?
But I don't think they really understand how that plays out
and how people are battling for doing well
and flourishing in the environment that they're in
and they're going to use the tools available to them.
And that in itself.
That in itself.
From what I hear about coming out of gender studies camps, the tours available to them and that in itself. Do you think so?
From what I hear about coming out of Gender Studies camps, there is a good bit of adversarial
sort of arms-racie type language.
Is that misguided?
Am I reading it wrong?
Um, I don't know if I would say you were reading it wrong, but I think that my take of that
world is it can be very wrapped up in victims and persecutors.
It's one direction or there's either the group that is doing bad things to the other group,
right? And then that group is big terms.
There's oppressors and depressors.
Exactly.
Yes, thank you much more eloquently said.
And so I think they get kind of wrapped up in that narrative.
And then I think there can be a tendency
to ignore the fact that an individual within a oppressor group
does not mean that they are necessarily having a better life situation.
Right? So much more important than being in the oppressor or the oppressed group,
and let's say the male or the female group, much more important than which group you're in,
is your position as an individual. I think that an evolutionary biology has shown to us that individuals do not act in the best interests of their group, they act in the best interests of themselves.
And that is one of the kind of core misconceptions and one of the insights that I of your sex or race or country of birth or whatever
it might be, that you are inherently having a better time. Like, if I had the choice between being
a middle class black guy or a super working class white guy, I know which one I'm going to take.
No one ever really wants to talk about class, especially coming from the UK,
and people in America don't really understand this.
I don't know what Australia's class system or lack
is there of is like, but the UK is still so class based.
I think it's because we're just so old, right?
It's inculcated in the post code that you live in,
and the street that you're on.
It's everything.
And yeah, coming from somewhere that is so class dominant,
there was a really good article,
a really good hiring drive by a bank a couple of years ago
that said rather than it being,
we're going to arbitrarily pick some like ethnic or sex group
and we're going to have this amount of this many people, they decided that they were going to arbitrarily pick some like ethnic or sex group and we're going to have this
amount of this many people. They decided that they were going to pick, I think it was
30% of 30% of managers by this particular year were going to be from a working class background.
And I thought that's a cool policy because that cuts across the board, right? Doesn't
discriminate based on race, sex, anything. So there we go.
Anyway, can this Blake, ladies and gentlemen, if people want to keep up to date with the stuff that you do, where should they go?
Follow me on Twitter, if I talk about the work a lot there and the new papers there a lot,
or go to our lab website at the Melbourne School of Psychological Science and you can just google
evolution lab and you'll come right across us.
I appreciate you. Thank you.
Thanks very much Chris.
you