I realize what the article was about. My point is that there isn't a black and white line between golddiggers and "normal" women, as a lot of guys would like to believe. They WAAAAAY underestimate the role that a man's ability to provide has in attracting (and keeping) a woman. If you think it is "wrong" for a woman to lose attraction when the sh!t hits the financial fan, then you have to think it is wrong for a man to lose attraction toward a woman who loses her beauty. If you believe that a man has a "right" to lose attraction to a woman who gets fat, yet it is horrible for a woman to lose attraction for a man who loses his job, you either don't have a very good understanding of the nature of attraction or you are being hypocritical.ketostix said:See Str8up you are insinuating that every woman has the same nature. If this were true then we wouldn't find some percentage of attractive women that marry a guy who isn't rich and stay with him through hard times. There is a percentage of women like this whether it's 40% or 20% or whatever.This article wasn't about these women not sticking with their man through hard times. They were out the door the minute the wealth was reduced.
The key phrase here is "everything else being equal".What I'm saying is these women were evidently there only for that criterion. We can find plenty of women who choose a guy who isn't near as wealthy as other options she has. Not all women put means above everything else.
I know that it's NEVER equal, but if it were (and the woman did not risk being judged), the woman would choose the guy with greater means.
For lack of a better model, let's refer to The Ladder Theory to illustrate a breakdown of how attraction is different between men and women.I don't think it's completely analagous between how a man is attracted to a woman's overall physicality and how a woman is attracted to wealth. If anything women are hardwired to respond to several criteria, the guy's overall persona and his appearance, along with his economic stature.
You may or may not agree 100% with the two pie charts, but I would guess that it's about as accurate as you're gonna get, especially how women's criteria are 50% wealth/power, and men's are 60% looks. If you agree with the proportions of these charts I think it's safe to compare the two.
So when a man loses his ability to acquire resources, wouldn't it make sense that a woman might feel a little less "safe"?Well maybe so but when women feel safe they are less inclined to go looking for male protection. Same thing when they have financial security whether that's through their own ability to earn or find another rich sucker. They're less inclined to be agreeable or loyal.
Again, my point was that all women ARE wired to be attracted to wealth and resources, and that a woman losing attraction for a man who loses some of the things that attracted her to him in the first place is no more right wrong than a man losing attraction toward a woman who loses her beauty. The women in this article are obviously extreme examples, and nobody wants a chick that is with him only for his money, but if you think that for some women these things aren't even a factor you are living in a fantasy.My point is for better or worse not every woman marries solely for money which these women did. So I think it's eroneous to say "all women are hard wired like these ones".
We can run around debating the details of attraction all day long, but I think it's safe to say that most of us are in agreement that wealth and power play a huge role in attraction. You can even break it down into individual traits that drive women crazy, but when yuo do it's easy to see that these traits are nothing more than indicators of the ability to acquire wealth and power.Again the problem is these women weren't attracted to any quality of the man, just his wealth. You are making the insinuation that we know what women are attracted to and it's wealth. I believe that women are fundamentally attracted to a man's mental makeup and his appearance stemming from that, his mood, expressions etc.
I am interested in hearing your idea of how the pie charts should be broken down.
Of course women aren't carbon copies. You are missing the point. On a basic level they all want about the same thing, but the esoteric nature of female attraction (actually mens too, but even moreso womens) leads it to manifest itself in different ways with different women.If woman were all carbon copies controlled by nature's programming, then the common held belief that women from 3rd world countries are different from US women wouldn't be true.
This I agree with 110%.Women aren't really attracted to money itself per se. They want money of course, but what they are attracted to is a man's ability to succeed and his power and influence over others. Some women will get with a man only for money and not actually be attracted to his qualities as a person. The instance the money's gone, the women are gone. That's the point I was making.
The entire premise of the PUA community is based upon a bunch of geeks who were fed up with not getting laid, so they sat down and studied **GASP** evolutionary psychology and figured out a way to capitalize on the fact that women use "shortcuts" to determine the suitability of a mate, which (until the awareness the PUA movement brought) were actually a more reliable way to determine fitness fo a mate.
In other words, women are attracted to the qualities, not things.
If nature played only a 50% role in determining our behavior, we would be wiped off the planet within a few generations.I'm just not a believer in moral relativism, evolutionary psychology, or that human behavior is as predictable as low order animals based in instinct. I think enviromental conditions and nurture are big factors, at least the equal of "evolution" or so-called hard wiring.
It might appear that we have it all figured out and that we are "in control", but when it comes down to it, the basic needs to survive and reproduce will trump anything society tries to throw at it.