Dictionay.com defines CD as:
noun Psychology.
anxiety that results from simultaneously holding contradictory or otherwise incompatible attitudes, beliefs, or the like, as when one likes a person but disapproves strongly of one of his or her habits.
Can the uniquely female phenomenon of saying X but doing Y be attributed to cognitive dissonance? When a women says that she does not want to be dominated by a man - this is cognitive dissonance, not duplicity, correct?
Women want alpha males. Biology tells us that alpha males enjoy harems. Women tell us they want fidelity.
Women say they want an equal relationship. The fifth Commandment of Poon is "Give your woman 2/3 of everything she gives you." Roissy calls this the "golden ratio".
Good examples of female cognitive dissonance are infinite, so I'll stop there.
Feminism is essentially a guide on how not to get laid. Are feminists aware of this? I've heard feminism described as a "smoke screen" to keep beta males at bay.
All this must be cognitive dissonance because I see the anger in the faces of my feminist professors. I hear indignation in their voices. It's sincere.
I don't understand how a human being can function in this world when there is that large of a disconnect between what they say and do. Krauser talked about this on "London Real". In the same interview he said something along the lines of (I'm paraphrasing) women don't interact with the real world, because they can't.
Initially, I thought he was referring to the fact that women are not capable of taking down an ox or fighting off the rival tribe. I thought he meant that a man is better suited for surviving, by himself, in the woods.
What I think he actually meant was that women can't interact with reality in anyway. Not physically. But not mentally either.
I hope I'm not bringing up a stale topic.
Laterz -
J.
noun Psychology.
anxiety that results from simultaneously holding contradictory or otherwise incompatible attitudes, beliefs, or the like, as when one likes a person but disapproves strongly of one of his or her habits.
Can the uniquely female phenomenon of saying X but doing Y be attributed to cognitive dissonance? When a women says that she does not want to be dominated by a man - this is cognitive dissonance, not duplicity, correct?
Women want alpha males. Biology tells us that alpha males enjoy harems. Women tell us they want fidelity.
Women say they want an equal relationship. The fifth Commandment of Poon is "Give your woman 2/3 of everything she gives you." Roissy calls this the "golden ratio".
Good examples of female cognitive dissonance are infinite, so I'll stop there.
Feminism is essentially a guide on how not to get laid. Are feminists aware of this? I've heard feminism described as a "smoke screen" to keep beta males at bay.
All this must be cognitive dissonance because I see the anger in the faces of my feminist professors. I hear indignation in their voices. It's sincere.
I don't understand how a human being can function in this world when there is that large of a disconnect between what they say and do. Krauser talked about this on "London Real". In the same interview he said something along the lines of (I'm paraphrasing) women don't interact with the real world, because they can't.
Initially, I thought he was referring to the fact that women are not capable of taking down an ox or fighting off the rival tribe. I thought he meant that a man is better suited for surviving, by himself, in the woods.
What I think he actually meant was that women can't interact with reality in anyway. Not physically. But not mentally either.
I hope I'm not bringing up a stale topic.
Laterz -
J.