AttackFormation
Master Don Juan
I posted this in another thread, but I figure this deluded idea is widespread and ingrained enough that it deserves its own thread to negate. I'm personally sick of this and other poorly conceived, malignant ideas coming out of the PUA community that do nothing but hurt young, vulnerable minds and their relations with other people. Like Tyler Durden in the movie "Fight Club", these ideas are a destructive, deluded extreme masquerading as "truth" and "solution" that attract the ignorant and vulnerable.
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I disagree completely with strength and size having anything to do with "stone age alphas".
- Humans live and hunt in cooperative groups
- Humans don't wrestle or outsprint prey
- Humans don't rely on natural implements to kill or incapacitate prey and defend themselves from predators
Stone age humans used traps, ambushes, tracking, dogs and a both instinctive and culturally developed tool use. Speed wouldn't be relevant for these methods, and increased size would be a negative as it just means that person consumes more resources that could've gone to feeding a second person instead, giving you hunters in 1 position instead of 2. Similarly, during conflict between groups of humans, it would be the tribe with the greater numbers of more culturally and mentally advanced humans that won.
Humans have never been a species relying on simple physical attributes to get the job done. That's the very reason why we evolved from stronger, bigger, tougher, faster apes in the first place. Attributing the success of "alpha males" to these attributes is putting the cart before the horse. In the stone age they were a remnant of our ape ancestors, not the reason why humans thrived. "But strong, big and fast males can push the other males around!" - no. Why? for the same reasons they can't do so today: a real fight has no rules, but the tribe does. So not only would he risk being killed in his sleep, shot in the back while out hunting, or just plain drawn a weapon upon and killed while standing in front of the guy trying to act tough - he also risks the condemnation and intervention of the tribe. To put it bluntly, if you think being an alpha human male is about being strong, fast and big, you're simply slinging sh!t at the actual fields of evolutionary biology and anthropology. The only reason why those attributes have any relevance at all culturally (not sexually, see last paragraph) is because the things humans actually use, artificial weapons and dirty tactics, are too deadly and effective to be allowed for use in civilian life.
My personal theory on why these traits have persisted in humans despite being in decline compared to our ape ancestors because of their none or negative correlation to survival and procreation, is that they are a form of sexual selection in the way a peacock's tail is. "Hey baby, imagine how good I have to be to get away with a handicap like this *flexes biceps*. All these genes could be yours. You know you want me". It's essentially a physical incarnation of risk-taking, which males typically display a higher degree of.
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I disagree completely with strength and size having anything to do with "stone age alphas".
- Humans live and hunt in cooperative groups
- Humans don't wrestle or outsprint prey
- Humans don't rely on natural implements to kill or incapacitate prey and defend themselves from predators
Stone age humans used traps, ambushes, tracking, dogs and a both instinctive and culturally developed tool use. Speed wouldn't be relevant for these methods, and increased size would be a negative as it just means that person consumes more resources that could've gone to feeding a second person instead, giving you hunters in 1 position instead of 2. Similarly, during conflict between groups of humans, it would be the tribe with the greater numbers of more culturally and mentally advanced humans that won.
Humans have never been a species relying on simple physical attributes to get the job done. That's the very reason why we evolved from stronger, bigger, tougher, faster apes in the first place. Attributing the success of "alpha males" to these attributes is putting the cart before the horse. In the stone age they were a remnant of our ape ancestors, not the reason why humans thrived. "But strong, big and fast males can push the other males around!" - no. Why? for the same reasons they can't do so today: a real fight has no rules, but the tribe does. So not only would he risk being killed in his sleep, shot in the back while out hunting, or just plain drawn a weapon upon and killed while standing in front of the guy trying to act tough - he also risks the condemnation and intervention of the tribe. To put it bluntly, if you think being an alpha human male is about being strong, fast and big, you're simply slinging sh!t at the actual fields of evolutionary biology and anthropology. The only reason why those attributes have any relevance at all culturally (not sexually, see last paragraph) is because the things humans actually use, artificial weapons and dirty tactics, are too deadly and effective to be allowed for use in civilian life.
My personal theory on why these traits have persisted in humans despite being in decline compared to our ape ancestors because of their none or negative correlation to survival and procreation, is that they are a form of sexual selection in the way a peacock's tail is. "Hey baby, imagine how good I have to be to get away with a handicap like this *flexes biceps*. All these genes could be yours. You know you want me". It's essentially a physical incarnation of risk-taking, which males typically display a higher degree of.
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