[sci.bio] Sexual selection

vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) (03/11/88)

In article <13400@sri-unix.SRI.COM> maslak@unix.sri.com (Valerie Maslak) writes:
>Sigh. I didn't say height was a sex-linked genetic characteristic.
>Although some men here seem to be arguning that it is !!!
>I MEANT that the much-above-average-height-and-build women were
>discriminated against in the selection process...not because they 
>weren't "the fittest" as some have argued that they are, but because
>the male-imposed norms for female desirability have made them less
>preferred as mates.
>
>This is getting tedious.

Yes, this seems to be the only possibility.  Nor should we be surprised:
in classical evolutionary theory it is described as "sexual selection."
It is used to describe various and sundry typcially male charactersitics
as peacock tails and other silly and seemingly useless features.  While
I've read about this, it has never made any sense to me.  

I'm cross-posted to sci.bio.  Could someone please explain the theory of
sexual selection to us, try to justify it (I've never believed it,
despite the evidence), and relate it to common sexual dimorphism like
height, etc.?

O---------------------------------------------------------------------->
| Cliff Joslyn, Professional Cybernetician 
| Systems Science Department, SUNY Binghamton, New York, but my opinions
| vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu
V All the world is biscuit shaped. . .

g-rh@cca.CCA.COM (Richard Harter) (03/11/88)

In article <913@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu> vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) writes:

>Yes, this seems to be the only possibility.  Nor should we be surprised:
>in classical evolutionary theory it is described as "sexual selection."
>It is used to describe various and sundry typcially male charactersitics
>as peacock tails and other silly and seemingly useless features.  While
>I've read about this, it has never made any sense to me.  

>I'm cross-posted to sci.bio.  Could someone please explain the theory of
>sexual selection to us, try to justify it (I've never believed it,
>despite the evidence), and relate it to common sexual dimorphism like
>height, etc.?

Let me make it simple, and talk about buying apples for a moment.  When
you eat an apple you want one that is ripe, does not have worms in it,
is not spoiled or bruised, and so on.  So what do you do when you go
to buy apples -- you look for one that is red, looks juicy, and is
unblemished.  The vendors of apples want to sell you apples, so they
take due care to provide apples that meet these criteria.

Note that these criteria don't actually tell you that this apple is
going to be good eating.  Note also that the vendor of apples is not
trying to supply you with good eating, she is trying to sell you what
you will buy.  Even so, you will tend to select the really red apple
unless you think about it, and the vendors of apples apply artifice
to make there apples redder than nature intended.  

Now you, as a clever human being, can figure out what the vendor is
up to, and can figure out what it is that you actually want.  But an
animal is not so clever, and relies on built in cues to make these
selections.  Success in breeding goes to those males who best meet
the built in cues.  Now these cues are often things like redness in
apples -- whence, the redder the better.  Males who most markedly
satisfy the selection criteria are most likely to get selected.  This
gets inherited, so the selection process drives steadily towards
emphasizing any feature that is used as a cue.

NOTE THAT IT IS THE FEMALE THAT SELECTS.  Females select, fundamentally,
because they make the big investment in offspring.  Since they do the
selecting, the selection process is not as demanding on them (except
that they must provide reliable fertility cues).

This is the general theory.  Human beings, at this point, are in a
special category; our sexual selection process does not match our
evolution -- we have mixed it all up by having intelligence and
civilization.
-- 

In the fields of Hell where the grass grows high
Are the graves of dreams allowed to die.
	Richard Harter, SMDS  Inc.

vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) (03/11/88)

In article <25443@cca.CCA.COM> g-rh@CCA.CCA.COM.UUCP (Richard Harter) writes:
>Let me make it simple, and talk about buying apples for a moment.  When
>you eat an apple you want one that is ripe, does not have worms in it,
>is not spoiled or bruised, and so on.  So what do you do when you go
>to buy apples -- you look for one that is red, looks juicy, and is
>unblemished.  The vendors of apples want to sell you apples, so they
>take due care to provide apples that meet these criteria.

Ah, I'm begining to see some parallels to other problems.  Perhaps this
is essentially a problem of evidence.  The female has a theory that
certain characteristics (e.g.  big tails, height, bulk) are good
evidence for genetic fitness.  Let us presume that originally this is
justified.  Then the "battle of the sexes" kicks in, and the males try
to increase the evidence, and don't give two hoots about the continued
validity of the evidence for the fitness.  The poor females are stuck,
without intelligence, and then a natural positive feedback process
ensues, resulting, ultimately, in the demise of the males whose
exagerrated sexual characteristics finally become de-selective (e.g. 
tails so big they can't even walk anymore) for that individual (although
still highly sexually selective). 

>This is the general theory.  Human beings, at this point, are in a
>special category; our sexual selection process does not match our
>evolution -- we have mixed it all up by having intelligence and
>civilization.

But presumably the above scenario was in effect throughout homonid
evolution, and modern dimorphism is the "residual" effect of that.  And
even though humans, through our intelligence, are free to ignore sexual
selection pressurres, I think we'd all agree that they are still
*frequently* adhered to (e.g.  frat boys/girls :->). 

O---------------------------------------------------------------------->
| Cliff Joslyn, Professional Cybernetician 
| Systems Science Department, SUNY Binghamton, New York, but my opinions
| vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu
V All the world is biscuit shaped. . .

kevin@chromo.ucsc.edu (Kevin McLoughlin) (03/17/88)

In article <914@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu> vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) writes:
>But presumably the above scenario was in effect throughout homonid
>evolution, and modern dimorphism is the "residual" effect of that.  

With the proviso that sexual selection works in two ways: 1) females
create a selection pressure for males to look like they can provide
good genes and (in hominids maybe also) help and companionship in the
hard work of raising a primate child to adulthood
2) males compete with each other for the sexual favor of the
females, which creates another selection pressure on males for 
traits that are important in this male-male competition process 
(dog-and-pony-show, really). A lot of (2) may be why males are
usually bigger than females in mammals: in some species (deer)
they fight, in other species they just try to scare and impress each
other with a mouthful of big teeth (chimps, baboons), colorful 
or hairy accouterments to the body (lions, orangutans, human males), 
aggressive show-offy behavior acting as IF they're the meanest 
SOB around (most mammalian males), etc.

So dimorphism MAY be a result of direct female choice for big males
but PROBABLY is more likely a result of the games males play with
each other.

-----------
Susan Nordmark
Internet: kevin@chromo.UCSC.edu			
UUCP: ...ucbvax!ucscc!chromo.kevin		Santa Cruz, CA 

hes@ecsvax.UUCP (Henry Schaffer) (03/17/88)

> In article <914@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu> vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) writes:
...
> So dimorphism MAY be a result of direct female choice for big males
> but PROBABLY is more likely a result of the games males play with
> each other.
> 
and if the result of winning in these games increases the chance of acceptance
by a female (i.e., increases the chance of passing on genes to future
generations) then the result is the same.
> Susan Nordmark
--henry schaffer  n c state univ

jnp@calmasd.GE.COM (John Pantone) (03/18/88)

> So dimorphism MAY be a result of direct female choice for big males
> but PROBABLY is more likely a result of the games males play with
> each other.
> 
> -----------
> Susan Nordmark
> Internet: kevin@chromo.UCSC.edu			
> UUCP: ...ucbvax!ucscc!chromo.kevin		Santa Cruz, CA 

I would guess this is at least partly true, but my feeling is that the
marked dimorphism  in humans is  the result of  physical adaptation to
social roles.  In  most  primitive societies (pre-agricultural)  women
are gatherers and men are hunters (and to a lesser extent women "hide"
with the children and men go out to confront  the "enemy").  The women
care for the children and gather food (the most reliable  food source)
and  men hunt  (less  reliable but  greater  quantities when  they are
successful).  The body forms of present day humans still  reflect this
adaptation rather well,  men are relatively  strong and "brawny",  but
tend toward  lower endurance, the women  are less muscular but tend to
be more able to carry out low-level activity for far longer than men.

Actually this endurance  thing  is extremely  interesting in   its own
right.  There   are  really only  2 animals  on   earth which  hunt by
out-enduring  (running down) their prey   - humans  and canines.  This
form  of  hunting is called  "Cursorial"  (runners) and relys  on  the
exceptional endurance  of humans and  dogs compared  to  virtually any
other animal.  So - the difference between the endurance of men versus
women is only relative.

Please - no flames - I am  well aware of the  fact that this is simply
an overall tendency - there are plenty  of "big" women and "small" men
but they are exceptions.
-- 
These opinions are solely mine and in no way reflect those of my employer.  
John M. Pantone @ GE/Calma R&D, 9805 Scranton Rd., San Diego, CA 92121
...{ucbvax|decvax}!sdcsvax!calmasd!jnp   jnp@calmasd.GE.COM   GEnie: J.PANTONE

g-rh@cca.CCA.COM (Richard Harter) (03/19/88)

>I would guess this is at least partly true, but my feeling is that the
>marked dimorphism  in humans is  the result of  physical adaptation to
>social roles.  In  most  primitive societies (pre-agricultural)  women
>are gatherers and men are hunters (and to a lesser extent women "hide"
>with the children and men go out to confront  the "enemy").  The women
>care for the children and gather food (the most reliable  food source)
>and  men hunt  (less  reliable but  greater  quantities when  they are
>successful).  The body forms of present day humans still  reflect this
>adaptation rather well,  men are relatively  strong and "brawny",  but
>tend toward  lower endurance, the women  are less muscular but tend to
>be more able to carry out low-level activity for far longer than men.

	Unlikely -- it is probably more the other way around -- social
roles adapt to physical differences.  Primate dimorphism is general in
the great apes and rather old -- it goes back a long ways.  One has to
consider the possibility that dismorphism is (at this point) simply built
in.   Organisms are not infinitely malleable; selection works with existing
mechanisms.  It may, in effect, be hard to select against dimorphism
once the mechansim is thoroughly in place.

	Another factor that should be considered is that selection in
humans and pre-humans operated differently than it does in baboons,
for example.  In baboons a male gets to breed if it is an alpha male.
Selection is strong for alpha male traits.  In humans a male gets to
breed if he can find a mate.  Most males get to breed; only the marginal
ones do not.  Selection is much weaker and is mostly negative selection
against non-survival traits and those traits that lead males either not
to breed or not to be an acceptable mate to any female.  A major class
of such traits is 'social acceptability' -- any individual that cannot
be accepted in the tribe has low prospects for being part of the breeding
pool.

	In a general way there may be something to what you say --
social roles can condition selection.  The problem with that idea is
simply that it is easier to alter social roles to fit physiology than
it is to alter physiology to fit social roles, in humans, at least.
-- 

In the fields of Hell where the grass grows high
Are the graves of dreams allowed to die.
	Richard Harter, SMDS  Inc.

kevin@chromo.ucsc.edu (Kevin McLoughlin) (03/19/88)

In article <4776@ecsvax.UUCP> hes@ecsvax.UUCP (Henry Schaffer) writes:
>...
>> Susan Nordmark writes:
>> So dimorphism MAY be a result of direct female choice for big males
>> but PROBABLY is more likely a result of the games males play with
>> each other.
>> 
>and if the result of winning in these games increases the chance of acceptance
>by a female (i.e., increases the chance of passing on genes to future
>generations) then the result is the same.

Well, but it's complicated. It's likely that (higher primates again, here)
you have this male-male competition-to-mate process, and within that system
male aggressiveness is selected for (this is the first selection pressure)
because it increases the chances that a male will advance to the top
of the male-male competition hierarchy. (Think of it as a ladder.)
But FEMALES tend to not like super-aggressive males, because they're
dangerous to be around for adult females and infants alike--they
just have a hair-trigger temper. Female choice (the second selection
pressure) is for males who rise to the MIDDLE of the ladder, those
who demonstrate strength and moderate aggressiveness but not too much;
who can also be gentle and nice to be around.
So there's this process in which females continue to select from the
middle of the ladder, but male-male competition still exists as an
opposing force at a strong enough level--in order to drive 
male behavior toward the aggressive end. (why? I don't know. Because
aggressive behavior on the part of males carries risks, and so
there has to be an impetus to do it at all.)

IE, there's two processes and the two sexes have conflicting interests.

-----------
Susan Nordmark
Internet: kevin@chromo.UCSC.edu			
UUCP: ...ucbvax!ucscc!chromo.kevin		Santa Cruz, CA 

rdh@sun.uucp (Robert Hartman) (03/19/88)

In article <2686@calmasd.GE.COM> jnp@calmasd.GE.COM (John Pantone) writes:
>
>I would guess this is at least partly true, but my feeling is that the
>marked dimorphism  in humans is  the result of  physical adaptation to
>social roles.

I don't think that social roles are sufficient to account for the dimorphism,
in our secondary sexual characteristics.

I suspect that a more likely cause is that in the environmental settings in
which we began to diverge from the other great apes, there was a physical
advantage to these differences for child-rearing.  -bob.

heather@blia.BLI.COM (Heather Mackinnon) (03/19/88)

There have been many human societies with baboon-style alpha male
mating patterns.  The early Hebrews practiced polygamy.  The Egyptians
practiced polygamy as did the early Greeks (concubinage).  Polygamy has
been practiced until recent times by American Indians, in the mideast,
by Mormons in the U.S., throughout the Orient and by various African tribes.
In fact, I can't think of any non-European culture that has exclusively
practiced monogamy.  In hunter-gatherer and belligerent societies, the
death rate among adult males would be expected to be higher than among
adult females.  In a subsistence culture, you wouldn't want to waste any
breeding females; too few babies survive to adulthood.

This leads to an interesting question:  when did the move towards monogamy
happen and why?  Did it happen when agriculture replaced hunting and 
gathering?  Did it happen with the growth of cities?  Did it happen when
the male and female populations became more even?  Does it have anything
to do with Christianity?  (In India, Hinduism permits polygamy, but
Mohammedism forbids it.)

In any case, our human history of polygamy would explain high levels of
sexual dimorphism in humans.

vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) (03/20/88)

In article <4368@blia.BLI.COM> heather@blia.BLI.COM (Heather Mackinnon) writes:
>There have been many human societies with baboon-style alpha male
>mating patterns.  The early Hebrews practiced polygamy.  
> [etc. interesting comments on *polygamy* ]

Is it wise to identify alpha-male "harem" style breeding behavior with
human polygamy? My impression is that in *large* cultures that
*actively* practice polygamy (e.g.  Arabic, African Moslem, ruling out
Mormons as a "deviant" group (I can see those Mormon flamers getting
going)) that it is not required, and that most all men have at least one
wife, while the wealthy few can afford more than one.  Two or three is a
bit more common, but in, say, elks, the harem sizes can be more than a
dozen. 

O---------------------------------------------------------------------->
| Cliff Joslyn, Professional Cybernetician 
| Systems Science Department, SUNY Binghamton, New York, but my opinions
| vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu
V All the world is biscuit shaped. . .

g-rh@cca.CCA.COM (Richard Harter) (03/20/88)

In article <4368@blia.BLI.COM> heather@blia.BLI.COM (Heather Mackinnon) writes:
>There have been many human societies with baboon-style alpha male
>mating patterns.  [Examples of polygamy deleted.]

	Not the same thing.  Human polygamy is tied to support.  The
male with several wives must be able to support them all.  In these
societies I believe you will find that polygamy was pretty much restricted
to a relatively wealthy minority, with most people being monogamous.
In baboons, et. al. the alpha male does not support the females and
the young.  Only the alpha males breed.  The situations are quite
different from a selection viewpoint.

>This leads to an interesting question:  when did the move towards monogamy
>happen and why?  Did it happen when agriculture replaced hunting and 
>gathering?  Did it happen with the growth of cities?  Did it happen when
>the male and female populations became more even?  Does it have anything
>to do with Christianity?  (In India, Hinduism permits polygamy, but
>Mohammedism forbids it.)

I'm a little skeptical about this idea that the male and female populations
were ever out of balance as a regular thing -- on one hand the males lead
riskier lives, on the other hand females died with great regularity in
childbirth.

I would phrase the question differently, as "when did polygamy become
unacceptable?".  I rather suspect that wide spread polygamy came into
being with agriculture, just because it became economically feasible
(i.e. wealth suplus and larger, more differentiated society.)  It is
an interesting question, though.
-- 

In the fields of Hell where the grass grows high
Are the graves of dreams allowed to die.
	Richard Harter, SMDS  Inc.

eder@ssc-vax.UUCP (Dani Eder) (03/27/88)

In article <25746@cca.CCA.COM>, g-rh@cca.CCA.COM (Richard Harter) writes:
> In article <4368@blia.BLI.COM> heather@blia.BLI.COM (Heather Mackinnon) writes:
> >There have been many human societies with baboon-style alpha male
> >mating patterns.  [Examples of polygamy deleted.]
> 
> 	Not the same thing.  Human polygamy is tied to support.  The
> male with several wives must be able to support them all.  In these
> societies I believe you will find that polygamy was pretty much restricted
> to a relatively wealthy minority, with most people being monogamous.
> 
> >This leads to an interesting question:  when did the move towards monogamy
> >happen and why?  Did it happen when agriculture replaced hunting and 
> >gathering?  Did it happen with the growth of cities?  Did it happen when
> >the male and female populations became more even?  Does it have anything
> >to do with Christianity?  (In India, Hinduism permits polygamy, but
> >Mohammedism forbids it.)
> 
> 	Richard Harter, SMDS  Inc.

I find it interesting that the previous posters refer to polygamy in the past tense.  I have observed a phenomenon which I would consider the modern
equivalent of polygamy.  In a large corporation (such as the one I
work for) there is a definite correlation between status and number
of 'daytime wives' (also known as secretaries).  The lowest status
males (technical aides, manufacturing shop personnel) cannot
even ask a female to do a task.  Medium status males (engineers)
share the use of a female ona ratio of about one female per ten
males.  High status males (management) have dedicated use of one
female per male, and the highest status males (officers) have
more than one each.  The status (salary) of the female is tied to
the stat (level of management) of the male, rather than any
measure of competance for the female.

All the 'daytime wives' are in addition to the nighttime wives.
Here too, there is a progression.  There is a definite correlation
betweemale status and probability of having a nighttime wife.

Dani Eder/Boeing/Space Station Program/ssc-vaeder

kevin@chromo.ucsc.edu (Kevin McLoughlin) (03/29/88)

>In article <25746@cca.CCA.COM>, g-rh@cca.CCA.COM (Richard Harter) writes:
>> In article <4368@blia.BLI.COM> heather@blia.BLI.COM (Heather Mackinnon) writes:
>> >There have been many human societies with baboon-style alpha male
>> >mating patterns.  [Examples of polygamy deleted.]
>> 	Not the same thing.  Human polygamy is tied to support.  The
>> male with several wives must be able to support them all.  In these
>> societies I believe you will find that polygamy was pretty much restricted
>> to a relatively wealthy minority, with most people being monogamous.

>> >This leads to an interesting question:  when did the move towards monogamy
>> >happen and why?  Did it happen when agriculture replaced hunting and 
>> >gathering?  Did it happen with the growth of cities?  

Based on my knowledge of hominid evolution, prehistoric evidence,
and known human societies (i.e. some graduate work in this field), 
my guess is that what's key here is not monogamy or polygamy per se, but
thinking about rigid pairing and the institution of marriage itself,
and humans evolving to get smart enough to map out their own kinship
on a symbolic basis, ie caring about paternity and such. I suspect it
also might have something to do with a shift from egalitarian groups,
centrally organized around females and their children and sisters 
and male consorts, to power lodged with males. And my pet theory
has for some time located this during some ice age, perhaps around
the Homo sapiens emergence period ~ 40-30,000 BP. Why? Because during
most of hominid evolution, females probably provided the bulk and
the most dependable source of food, via gathering vegetable foods
and small animals for protein. A female didn't HAVE to have a male
around (sure, it helped, but she could make it with a little help
from her friends/sisters/aunts). During the colder periods in the
temperate latitudes, however, these plant foods weren't available
for most of the year and women would have had to depend on males
to hunt bigger animals for food (the main reason women couldn't
do this heavy-duty hunting work: they were pregnant or nursing
a lot of the time). Thus they became REALLY dependent on males
for the first time in evolutionary history. Males slowly 
started to call more of the shots.

And as we know, males have this thing about paternity, wanting
to ensure who's whose (in contrast to females, who have no particular
evolutionary interest in getting the same guy who fathered their
kids, to help raise them); so rigidified mating could have replaced
flexible promiscuity most easily at this time. (And the rest, as we say,
is--groan--history.)

>> >Did it happen when
>> >the male and female populations became more even?  

Sex ratios at birth are ALWAYS nearly even, at least for mammals.
This is a biological "fact". 
Thus when you have a situation (animal or human) in which polygyny
(a male with >1 female mate) or polyandry (a female with >1 male mate)
occurs to any significant degree, there are always surplus males or 
females left over. Among mammals polygyny is far more common, so
it's bachelor males who are commonly left over and--such as in 
many monkey species and I think also deer and wild sheep and such--
who often form "bachelor male" groups that forage together.

-----------
Susan Nordmark
Internet: kevin@chromo.UCSC.edu			
UUCP: ...ucbvax!ucscc!chromo.kevin		Santa Cruz, CA 

jnp@calmasd.GE.COM (John Pantone) (03/30/88)

> Sex ratios at birth are ALWAYS nearly even, at least for mammals.
> This is a biological "fact". 

Not so.  Check   this month's issue  of  Natural History  for a   very
interesting survey of "manipulated" sex ratios.  Depending on what you
mean by "nearly" this is  not true for  humans, either.   There  are a
statistically significant  number of "excess" males born  - by the age
of  reproduction the ratio   has evened out  -  males  have  a  higher
mortality.

-- 
These opinions are solely mine and in no way reflect those of my employer.  
John M. Pantone @ GE/Calma R&D, 9805 Scranton Rd., San Diego, CA 92121
...{ucbvax|decvax}!sdcsvax!calmasd!jnp   jnp@calmasd.GE.COM   GEnie: J.PANTONE

vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Cliff Joslyn) (03/31/88)

In article <2701@calmasd.GE.COM> jnp@calmasd.GE.COM (John Pantone) writes:
>> Sex ratios at birth are ALWAYS nearly even, at least for mammals.
>> This is a biological "fact". 
>
>There  are a
>statistically significant  number of "excess" males born  - by the age
>of  reproduction the ratio   has evened out  -  males  have  a  higher
>mortality.

I was told in high school biology that this trend is actually pre-natal:
that is, significantly more males are conceived and spontaneously abort. 
There are slightly more baby boys than girls, and of course by the time
we're looking at the geriatric populations women far outnumber men. 

Is this true cross-species?

O---------------------------------------------------------------------->
| Cliff Joslyn, Professional Cybernetician 
| Systems Science Department, SUNY Binghamton, New York
| vu0112@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu
V All the world is biscuit shaped. . .

dlk411@tijc02.UUCP (Dianne King ) (04/05/88)

> I find it interesting that the previous posters refer to polygamy in the past tense.  I have observed a phenomenon which I would consider the modern
> equivalent of polygamy.  In a large corporation (such as the one I
> work for) there is a definite correlation between status and number
> of 'daytime wives' (also known as secretaries).  The lowest status
> males (technical aides, manufacturing shop personnel) cannot
> even ask a female to do a task.  Medium status males (engineers)
> share the use of a female ona ratio of about one female per ten
> males.  High status males (management) have dedicated use of one
> female per male, and the highest status males (officers) have
> more than one each.  The status (salary) of the female is tied to
> the stat (level of management) of the male, rather than any
> measure of competance for the female.
> 
> All the 'daytime wives' are in addition to the nighttime wives.
> Here too, there is a progression.  There is a definite correlation
> betweemale status and probability of having a nighttime wife.
> 
> Dani Eder/Boeing/Space Station Program/ssc-vaeder

Dani - please note the absence of :-) in my response.

I am an engineer with access to a shared secretary, but I am not a
medium status male.  I am sure my husband would agree.  Nor would I
consider my supervisor who has the majority of one secretary's time
a high status male.  I am sure her husband would also agree.  Hopefully
you do not have a significant amount of input into hiring decisions.

I find it more difficult to comment on the sexist secretary remarks
as I have only seen female secretaries after working for several 
companies.  However, I am sure there are many unemployed males who would
accept these positions if offered, and if it had been a serious career
alternative might have developed the necessary skills.

And about that correlation between professional use of a secretary
and spouses.  What about the other factors such as age - with increased
experience comes a greater chance for promotion.  With increased age
comes a greater chance for having found the 'right' mate.  But I am sure
your sexist conclusions were much more convenient for your invalid comment
on polygomous relationships.

Dianne King 

pan@well.UUCP (Philip Nicholls) (04/10/88)

>And my pet theory
>has for some time located this during some ice age, perhaps around
>the Homo sapiens emergence period ~ 40-30,000 BP. 

This is very interesting.  However, if we are to assume that male
dominance evolved at this time, then how is one to explain societies
that are still hunter-gather, and which do have male dominant social
systems by matrifocal kinship.

It also assumes that Homo sapiens evolved in Europe or in areas affected
by glaciation.  There is every indication now, based on mtDNA stuff, that
Homo sapiens first diverged in Africa.
-- 
"To ask a question, you must first know most of the answer."
                                     - Robert Sheckley

   pan@well.UUCP (you figure out how to get their).