Jared Diamond

Why is Sex Fun?: the evolution of human sexuality

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  • •》°Crazy Cat Lady°《•has quoted3 years ago
    confines itself to the insights that we can gain into our sexuality merely by broadening our perspective to encompass other animal species.
  • •》°Crazy Cat Lady°《•has quoted3 years ago
    I'll ignore that broader perspective because I haven't yet worked through my own zoo-centrism.
  • •》°Crazy Cat Lady°《•has quoted3 years ago
    conform to our own standards.
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    At times of crisis, such as a hungi kengi, the prior death of such an older woman also tended to eliminate all of her surviving relatives from the gene pool—a huge genetic price to pay for the dubious privilege of continuing to produce another baby or two against lengthening odds. That importance to society of the memories of old women is what I see as a major driving force behind the evolution of human female menopause
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    Natual selection has not programmed menopause into men because of three more cruel facts: men never die in childbirth and rarely die while copulating, and they are less likely than mothers to exhaust themselves caring for infants
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    Evidently, as a woman ages, she can do more to increase the number of people bearing her genes by devoting herself to her existing children, her potential grandchildren, and her other relatives than by producing yet another child
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    Similarly, animals whose lifestyles carry a high risk of accidental death are evolutionarily programmed to stint on repair and to age rapidly, even when living in the well-nourished safety of a laboratory cage. Mice, subject to high rates of predation in the wild, are evolutionarily programmed to invest less in repair and to age more rapidly than similar-sized caged birds that in the wild can escape predators by flying. Turtles, protected in the wild by a shell, are programmed to age more slowly than other reptiles, while porcupines, protected by quills, age more slowly than mammals comparable in size.
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    Not a single monogamous primate species has boldly advertised ovulations, which instead are usually (in fourteen out of eighteen cases) confined to promiscuous species. That seems to be strong support for the daddy-at-home theory
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    Hrdy considers concealed ovulation an evolutionary adaptation by females to minimize the big threat to their offsprings’ survival posed by adult males. Whereas Alexander and Noonan view concealed ovulation as clarifying paternity and reinforcing monogamy, Hrdy sees it as confusing paternity and effectively undoing monogamy
  • novita oeihas quoted4 years ago
    cavewomen aware of the pain and danger of childbirth, and also aware of their day of ovulation, misused that knowledge to avoid sex then. Such women failed to pass on their genes, leaving the world populated by women ignorant of their time of ovulation and thus unable to avoid having sex while fertile
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