SolomonVII
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- Sep 4, 2003
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Given that creativity is a part of human nature, there is virtually no limit to the types of variance that a culture may have when it comes to expressions of gender roles. Change is the only constant.Well, like I said. I'm Neo-Aristotelian. I don't disagree with you on anything here.
What I'd like to know is how we get from objective biological differences to normative social behavior that is somehow objectively binding across cultures. I keep on asking what people mean by "traditional masculinity," because that could really mean anything from the Greco-Roman civic virtues to "boys will be boys" and "if your son likes to dance, he's a sissy and/or gay." Both of these things are problematic, though for different reasons.
Now, I also agree with you that women do seem to hold more power than men do in terms of choosing partners, which I think makes the question of "traditional masculinity" even more interesting, because what is considered masculine will to a certain extent match whatever recent generations of women have decided that they find attractive in men, and if there has been a genuine change in what women are willing to accept over the past few generations, then the notion of traditional masculinity will have to keep up.
The “intelligence” of female selection often finds expression at the level of phenerome and ‘vibe’ rather than actual conscious decision. The result is that the woman fuming over the man-splainer typically ends up choosing that man for a sexually partner rather than the more feminized male that fits better into her ideology. That is one of life’s wryer ironies.
What any culture finds to be feminine and masculine varies. What has not varied is that all cultures develop parameters for what is considered to be feminine and masculine and these parameters are objectively true to the extent that they are based in the inherent difference between the sexes, as determined by eons of evolution. No culture starts from a blank slate in this regard.
Like eating and elimination and breathing, reproduction is a natural process, and the objective truth of any cultural expression of reproductive-type behaviour is measured in successfully fulfilling the needs of the organic need of what the process was designed to fulfill.
What is true is what is effective.
A woman whose sexual choices precludes most expressions of male masculine behaviour in society is not only forfeiting the continuance of the males genetic lineage into the future, but also her own. If what is stressed is the power dynamic and the conflict model of male vs female, everybody loses.
There is a often cognitive dissonance in what women often say they want in a man and what they select. My own guess is that crying and feminine behaviour on behalf of males is not sending out the kind of pheromones that the typical female will ever find all that attractive.
Going strictly by what the nature of the evolution of our physiology suggests, the natural state of a woman’s sexual choice may well be domesticating with the feminized male in order to raise the children of the alpha male who impregnates her. Nature alone therefore is not the formula for a peaceful society.
This is what Christian morality and traditional gender roles have been developed to deliver us from. Society evolves away from those kinds of traditional systems at their own risk. Culture is not like a wardrobe that we select from each morning, but it is an essential part of who we are. nothing is just a social construct. We are no longer merely animals who can survive by our instincts alone.
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