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Height-ism?

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Replies

  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Yep, this has always bothered me as well. Weight is much easier to control, but I get a lot of hate if I say I want someone to be fit. However, it's perfectly acceptable for women to say they won't date a man under a specified height. Why the double standard? Either we all have physical preferences and that is alright or we are scum if we won't date someone that doesn't meet a particular physical standard. Why would it be one way for men and different for women?

    "Fit" as in performance level is something different than weight, but I think both could be legitimate preferences for a mate -- either for men or women. Is someone arguing that women should have the option to screen partners for height and weight, but men shouldn't? Or that nobody should be screening for weight? I'm trying to understand where the double standard comes in between men and women, because women are absolutely screening for weight in partners, both online and in real life situations.

    The double standard is when women argue it is ok to screen based on height, but that men are not supposed to screen based on weight. I see this more often than not.

    ETA: On another site, a conversation about this came down to that weight is not something people can control, but that men can become taller with cosmetic surgery. Most everyone involved in the conversation agreed with that perspective.

    On the first page of this thread it was covered that people (men and women) routinely screen for fitness. I think you are creating a strawman that does not exist in reality. Bluntly, fat chicks are screened out by those not into fat chicks. This is not controversial. As a former fat chick, I expected men to not be interested. No one has ever said that men must date fat chicks.

    I think you've missed something. My experience is that women screen for height and it is considered to be acceptable, but that it is not considered to be acceptable for men to screen based on weight. Nobody is arguing that weight is not used for screening (by either gender), I'm just sharing my experience that we (men) are looked down upon when we won't date obese women. And that those same people who chastise men for refusing to date obese women have no objection to women who refuse to date short men. Again this is my experience. Not everyone has the same experiences and that is perfectly normal.

    You are comparing apples to oranges.

    Do some men screen women based on their size? Yes. Do some women screen men based on their size? Yes. It happens in both genders.

    If you want to look at comparable unfair bias, then you need to compare men screening on height vs women screening on height.

    Otherwise you might as well compare height vs intelligence, or size vs hair color.

    In my opinion... People have preferences. Period. If they choose to exclude someone based on not meeting their criteria, then it's their loss if that person is a perfect match in every other way.
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Yes, as noted above, it's completely common to say only fit or thin people only.

    I think it's because of the differences in getting to know someone first and then dating them vs. meeting to date without knowing the person as a person. Of course you tend to focus on the more superficial things more than if you know you already like someone.

    And if something truly is a deal-breaker, it's good to let people know upfront and not have them waste their time.

    As noted, the first page is on point. I'm quoting myself but many others had similar comments.

    The idea that men can't or don't reject fat women is bizarre, IMO. Of course they do and of course it's fine if they do.

    It seems I'm still not explaining my point clearly as there is still misunderstanding, so I'll try yet again...

    We all have preferences about physical appearance and I am of the opinion that this is acceptable. Many others disagree with me on specific factors. Examples:

    1. Men are often shamed for considering weight. Specifically, those people often cite that weight is not something women can control and believe it is unfair.

    2. Women often have a minimum height consideration. Many of the same people (both genders) who believe it us unfair for men to look at weight based on their belief that weight cannot be controlled will argue that it is acceptable for women to screen based on height.

    In some cases, those people go as far as to argue that men can control our height as a justification. These are the same people who believe women are unable to control weight.

    It is my opinion that this is a double standard. While I believe it is perfectly acceptable to screen based on weight and height, I disagree with those who say it is acceptable to ONLY screen based on height, but that it is not acceptable to screen on weight.

    How . . . how are you expected to control your height?!?
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    threewins wrote: »
    I truly believe that the vast majority of women are genetically programmed to not date men shorter than them. The proportion of male/female couples where the man is shorter than the woman is so small, much smaller than if random mixing occurred. Which begs the inevitable question: how do lesbians cope? Anyway, I happened to read a paper and it says that gay men prefer a partner who is slightly taller than them.

    I have no idea why we're going with the idea that women are "genetically programmed" (yuck, by the way!) here. Why isn't it that men are "genetically programmed" to be attracted to women who are shorter than them?

    If the relevant data you have on height preferences involves gay men, this would tend to support the thesis that MALE desires that are potentially relevant here too. Given that only one man can be taller than the other in a gay relationship, why aren't you wondering how they're coping instead of lesbians given that there is no data that lesbians even HAVE height preferences (which kind of knocks the women are "genetically programmed" theory into the water).

    I think there might be something to that notion, although I'd say "biologically predisposed" over genetically programmed.

    I remember reading something (long ago) about studies showing men seemed hardwired to subconsciously judge female attractiveness based on waist-hip ratio, which had something to do with indicating childbearing potential. Women likely have similar wiring to select mates for height, which should produce taller offspring, probably with higher chance of survival.

    So there's biological programming in both sexes, just for different criteria. Both based on reproduction, however. Survival of the species and all that.

    I have less objection to the idea that people are generally predisposed to prefer certain traits (with a wide latitude for normal human variations) than the statement that women are somehow "genetically programmed." It just sounds very demeaning.

    There has to be an evolutionary advantage for people getting taller. Why would an species decide to create more animals that require more calories to survive. So, I assert that there could be a sexual preference in women for taller men. Life is turning calories into kids.

    ** edit** I read your post wrong and had to correct myself.

    I think part of the problem in this branch of the thread is the use of terms that imply or that some people are going to understand as implying a deliberate effort on the part of an intelligent actor controlling human beings (like "genetically programmed" and a species "deciding" to create more animals that require more calories to survive), rather than sticking to terms like "evolutionary advantage" or a common or dominant genetic trait). This seems to be bothering some people, especially when those terms are being used in a way that seem to them to suggest that women but not men are subject to the control of this "genetic programming."

    That's not my problem with it. It's just my observation in reading the various posts.

    Words are words. People can get their underroos in a bunch or not.
    This is not a feminist debate. I'm not getting into that one. I did state that males have selection bias... Are those words acceptable to the court?🤔

    Word choice is meaningful, especially in a debate. I don't think you can really discuss whether or not women are *uniquely* vulnerable to "genetic programming" without wandering into issues of agency and whether or not women are fully human.

    Whether or not *you're* arguing that women are vulnerable to this "programming" while men are more rational, the wording of the original statement certainly could be interpreted that way, which is what I was objecting to.

    No matter what "words" I use, I am going to offend someone. If you are Christian, Islamic, Buddhist, odensist, atheist, believe that Zendu the extraterrestrial dropped us off from the mothership... all have different creation ideas or evolutionary ideas... so, I dont really care if it offends someone with words like "decided" or programmed.

    One question. Would you agree that the brain is a super computer of sorts?
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    threewins wrote: »
    I truly believe that the vast majority of women are genetically programmed to not date men shorter than them. The proportion of male/female couples where the man is shorter than the woman is so small, much smaller than if random mixing occurred. Which begs the inevitable question: how do lesbians cope? Anyway, I happened to read a paper and it says that gay men prefer a partner who is slightly taller than them.

    I have no idea why we're going with the idea that women are "genetically programmed" (yuck, by the way!) here. Why isn't it that men are "genetically programmed" to be attracted to women who are shorter than them?

    If the relevant data you have on height preferences involves gay men, this would tend to support the thesis that MALE desires that are potentially relevant here too. Given that only one man can be taller than the other in a gay relationship, why aren't you wondering how they're coping instead of lesbians given that there is no data that lesbians even HAVE height preferences (which kind of knocks the women are "genetically programmed" theory into the water).

    I think there might be something to that notion, although I'd say "biologically predisposed" over genetically programmed.

    I remember reading something (long ago) about studies showing men seemed hardwired to subconsciously judge female attractiveness based on waist-hip ratio, which had something to do with indicating childbearing potential. Women likely have similar wiring to select mates for height, which should produce taller offspring, probably with higher chance of survival.

    So there's biological programming in both sexes, just for different criteria. Both based on reproduction, however. Survival of the species and all that.

    I have less objection to the idea that people are generally predisposed to prefer certain traits (with a wide latitude for normal human variations) than the statement that women are somehow "genetically programmed." It just sounds very demeaning.

    There has to be an evolutionary advantage for people getting taller. Why would an species decide to create more animals that require more calories to survive. So, I assert that there could be a sexual preference in women for taller men. Life is turning calories into kids.

    ** edit** I read your post wrong and had to correct myself.

    I think part of the problem in this branch of the thread is the use of terms that imply or that some people are going to understand as implying a deliberate effort on the part of an intelligent actor controlling human beings (like "genetically programmed" and a species "deciding" to create more animals that require more calories to survive), rather than sticking to terms like "evolutionary advantage" or a common or dominant genetic trait). This seems to be bothering some people, especially when those terms are being used in a way that seem to them to suggest that women but not men are subject to the control of this "genetic programming."

    That's not my problem with it. It's just my observation in reading the various posts.

    Words are words. People can get their underroos in a bunch or not.
    This is not a feminist debate. I'm not getting into that one. I did state that males have selection bias... Are those words acceptable to the court?🤔

    Word choice is meaningful, especially in a debate. I don't think you can really discuss whether or not women are *uniquely* vulnerable to "genetic programming" without wandering into issues of agency and whether or not women are fully human.

    Whether or not *you're* arguing that women are vulnerable to this "programming" while men are more rational, the wording of the original statement certainly could be interpreted that way, which is what I was objecting to.

    I could care less of how anyone interprets my words. I am going to offend someone. Whether you are Christian, Islamic, Buddhist, Jewish, pagan, atheist, believe that Zendu dropped us off from the mothership. All have different beliefs or opinions on how we got here.

    One question... would you agree that the brain is a giant supercomputer of sorts?
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    edited November 2020
    Yes, it is a super computer and some are wired better than others.
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    edited November 2020
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    threewins wrote: »
    I truly believe that the vast majority of women are genetically programmed to not date men shorter than them. The proportion of male/female couples where the man is shorter than the woman is so small, much smaller than if random mixing occurred. Which begs the inevitable question: how do lesbians cope? Anyway, I happened to read a paper and it says that gay men prefer a partner who is slightly taller than them.

    I have no idea why we're going with the idea that women are "genetically programmed" (yuck, by the way!) here. Why isn't it that men are "genetically programmed" to be attracted to women who are shorter than them?

    If the relevant data you have on height preferences involves gay men, this would tend to support the thesis that MALE desires that are potentially relevant here too. Given that only one man can be taller than the other in a gay relationship, why aren't you wondering how they're coping instead of lesbians given that there is no data that lesbians even HAVE height preferences (which kind of knocks the women are "genetically programmed" theory into the water).

    I think there might be something to that notion, although I'd say "biologically predisposed" over genetically programmed.

    I remember reading something (long ago) about studies showing men seemed hardwired to subconsciously judge female attractiveness based on waist-hip ratio, which had something to do with indicating childbearing potential. Women likely have similar wiring to select mates for height, which should produce taller offspring, probably with higher chance of survival.

    So there's biological programming in both sexes, just for different criteria. Both based on reproduction, however. Survival of the species and all that.

    I have less objection to the idea that people are generally predisposed to prefer certain traits (with a wide latitude for normal human variations) than the statement that women are somehow "genetically programmed." It just sounds very demeaning.

    There has to be an evolutionary advantage for people getting taller. Why would an species decide to create more animals that require more calories to survive. So, I assert that there could be a sexual preference in women for taller men. Life is turning calories into kids.

    ** edit** I read your post wrong and had to correct myself.

    I think part of the problem in this branch of the thread is the use of terms that imply or that some people are going to understand as implying a deliberate effort on the part of an intelligent actor controlling human beings (like "genetically programmed" and a species "deciding" to create more animals that require more calories to survive), rather than sticking to terms like "evolutionary advantage" or a common or dominant genetic trait). This seems to be bothering some people, especially when those terms are being used in a way that seem to them to suggest that women but not men are subject to the control of this "genetic programming."

    That's not my problem with it. It's just my observation in reading the various posts.

    Words are words. People can get their underroos in a bunch or not.
    This is not a feminist debate. I'm not getting into that one. I did state that males have selection bias... Are those words acceptable to the court?🤔

    Word choice is meaningful, especially in a debate. I don't think you can really discuss whether or not women are *uniquely* vulnerable to "genetic programming" without wandering into issues of agency and whether or not women are fully human.

    Whether or not *you're* arguing that women are vulnerable to this "programming" while men are more rational, the wording of the original statement certainly could be interpreted that way, which is what I was objecting to.

    I could care less of how anyone interprets my words. I am going to offend someone. Whether you are Christian, Islamic, Buddhist, Jewish, pagan, atheist, believe that Zendu dropped us off from the mothership. All have different beliefs or opinions on how we got here.

    One question... would you agree that the brain is a giant supercomputer of sorts?

    But you're not in a situation where you're offending some unknown person out there who believes in a mothership. I'm an actual person in conversation with you, stating what I find worrying about those words.

    To be clear: I'm not offended. I've long ago realized that many men are determined to believe that women are intellectual inferior or not capable of rational thought. That's their loss, not mine.

    The brain is an organ that is capable of a great deal of computing power. Do I consider it a "super computer" in the sense that it is programmed? No. Do I believe there is a lot happening in there, in combination with our bodies, that we are not yet aware of. Yes. Do I think that women are uniquely vulnerable to subconscious drives or impulses? No.

    Big words scare UGG... I go back to safe, warm, cave and scrape callous off knuckles...
    Just like many women think men are all knuckle daggers that have no rational thoughts in their heads and only constantly thinking about 1 thing...
    What is instinct besides a form of biological programming? 🤔
    I'll leave you with that one.
    Yes... I think men are "programmed" by nature as well....
  • T1DCarnivoreRunner
    T1DCarnivoreRunner Posts: 11,502 Member
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Yep, this has always bothered me as well. Weight is much easier to control, but I get a lot of hate if I say I want someone to be fit. However, it's perfectly acceptable for women to say they won't date a man under a specified height. Why the double standard? Either we all have physical preferences and that is alright or we are scum if we won't date someone that doesn't meet a particular physical standard. Why would it be one way for men and different for women?

    "Fit" as in performance level is something different than weight, but I think both could be legitimate preferences for a mate -- either for men or women. Is someone arguing that women should have the option to screen partners for height and weight, but men shouldn't? Or that nobody should be screening for weight? I'm trying to understand where the double standard comes in between men and women, because women are absolutely screening for weight in partners, both online and in real life situations.

    The double standard is when women argue it is ok to screen based on height, but that men are not supposed to screen based on weight. I see this more often than not.

    ETA: On another site, a conversation about this came down to that weight is not something people can control, but that men can become taller with cosmetic surgery. Most everyone involved in the conversation agreed with that perspective.

    On the first page of this thread it was covered that people (men and women) routinely screen for fitness. I think you are creating a strawman that does not exist in reality. Bluntly, fat chicks are screened out by those not into fat chicks. This is not controversial. As a former fat chick, I expected men to not be interested. No one has ever said that men must date fat chicks.

    I think you've missed something. My experience is that women screen for height and it is considered to be acceptable, but that it is not considered to be acceptable for men to screen based on weight. Nobody is arguing that weight is not used for screening (by either gender), I'm just sharing my experience that we (men) are looked down upon when we won't date obese women. And that those same people who chastise men for refusing to date obese women have no objection to women who refuse to date short men. Again this is my experience. Not everyone has the same experiences and that is perfectly normal.

    You are comparing apples to oranges.

    Do some men screen women based on their size? Yes. Do some women screen men based on their size? Yes. It happens in both genders.

    If you want to look at comparable unfair bias, then you need to compare men screening on height vs women screening on height.

    Otherwise you might as well compare height vs intelligence, or size vs hair color.

    In my opinion... People have preferences. Period. If they choose to exclude someone based on not meeting their criteria, then it's their loss if that person is a perfect match in every other way.
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Yes, as noted above, it's completely common to say only fit or thin people only.

    I think it's because of the differences in getting to know someone first and then dating them vs. meeting to date without knowing the person as a person. Of course you tend to focus on the more superficial things more than if you know you already like someone.

    And if something truly is a deal-breaker, it's good to let people know upfront and not have them waste their time.

    As noted, the first page is on point. I'm quoting myself but many others had similar comments.

    The idea that men can't or don't reject fat women is bizarre, IMO. Of course they do and of course it's fine if they do.

    It seems I'm still not explaining my point clearly as there is still misunderstanding, so I'll try yet again...

    We all have preferences about physical appearance and I am of the opinion that this is acceptable. Many others disagree with me on specific factors. Examples:

    1. Men are often shamed for considering weight. Specifically, those people often cite that weight is not something women can control and believe it is unfair.

    2. Women often have a minimum height consideration. Many of the same people (both genders) who believe it us unfair for men to look at weight based on their belief that weight cannot be controlled will argue that it is acceptable for women to screen based on height.

    In some cases, those people go as far as to argue that men can control our height as a justification. These are the same people who believe women are unable to control weight.

    It is my opinion that this is a double standard. While I believe it is perfectly acceptable to screen based on weight and height, I disagree with those who say it is acceptable to ONLY screen based on height, but that it is not acceptable to screen on weight.

    How does one control height? How does a man become taller? I know many a man who wishes they had this super power.

    Also, I don't know of anyone who claims that incongruent double standard is legit. So I'm stymied on this whole thing.

    The methods suggested in conversations for how men can become taller:
    A. Wear pleasers (I had to Google this because I haven't heard of these. They are high-heels, and not really the same as gaining actual height.)
    B. Hormones. - I had to google this also and apparently there are some substances that might provide a small height gain under the right conditions.
    C. Cosmetic surgery. Apparently, there is a surgery that can add a few inches. My understanding is they cut the femurs and add supports to essentially extend the bones. I assume the soft tissue (muscles, skin, etc) adapts over time and is probably a tough recovery.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,226 Member
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Yep, this has always bothered me as well. Weight is much easier to control, but I get a lot of hate if I say I want someone to be fit. However, it's perfectly acceptable for women to say they won't date a man under a specified height. Why the double standard? Either we all have physical preferences and that is alright or we are scum if we won't date someone that doesn't meet a particular physical standard. Why would it be one way for men and different for women?

    "Fit" as in performance level is something different than weight, but I think both could be legitimate preferences for a mate -- either for men or women. Is someone arguing that women should have the option to screen partners for height and weight, but men shouldn't? Or that nobody should be screening for weight? I'm trying to understand where the double standard comes in between men and women, because women are absolutely screening for weight in partners, both online and in real life situations.

    The double standard is when women argue it is ok to screen based on height, but that men are not supposed to screen based on weight. I see this more often than not.

    ETA: On another site, a conversation about this came down to that weight is not something people can control, but that men can become taller with cosmetic surgery. Most everyone involved in the conversation agreed with that perspective.

    On the first page of this thread it was covered that people (men and women) routinely screen for fitness. I think you are creating a strawman that does not exist in reality. Bluntly, fat chicks are screened out by those not into fat chicks. This is not controversial. As a former fat chick, I expected men to not be interested. No one has ever said that men must date fat chicks.

    I think you've missed something. My experience is that women screen for height and it is considered to be acceptable, but that it is not considered to be acceptable for men to screen based on weight. Nobody is arguing that weight is not used for screening (by either gender), I'm just sharing my experience that we (men) are looked down upon when we won't date obese women. And that those same people who chastise men for refusing to date obese women have no objection to women who refuse to date short men. Again this is my experience. Not everyone has the same experiences and that is perfectly normal.

    You are comparing apples to oranges.

    Do some men screen women based on their size? Yes. Do some women screen men based on their size? Yes. It happens in both genders.

    If you want to look at comparable unfair bias, then you need to compare men screening on height vs women screening on height.

    Otherwise you might as well compare height vs intelligence, or size vs hair color.

    In my opinion... People have preferences. Period. If they choose to exclude someone based on not meeting their criteria, then it's their loss if that person is a perfect match in every other way.
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    lemurcat2 wrote: »
    Yes, as noted above, it's completely common to say only fit or thin people only.

    I think it's because of the differences in getting to know someone first and then dating them vs. meeting to date without knowing the person as a person. Of course you tend to focus on the more superficial things more than if you know you already like someone.

    And if something truly is a deal-breaker, it's good to let people know upfront and not have them waste their time.

    As noted, the first page is on point. I'm quoting myself but many others had similar comments.

    The idea that men can't or don't reject fat women is bizarre, IMO. Of course they do and of course it's fine if they do.

    It seems I'm still not explaining my point clearly as there is still misunderstanding, so I'll try yet again...

    We all have preferences about physical appearance and I am of the opinion that this is acceptable. Many others disagree with me on specific factors. Examples:

    1. Men are often shamed for considering weight. Specifically, those people often cite that weight is not something women can control and believe it is unfair.

    2. Women often have a minimum height consideration. Many of the same people (both genders) who believe it us unfair for men to look at weight based on their belief that weight cannot be controlled will argue that it is acceptable for women to screen based on height.

    In some cases, those people go as far as to argue that men can control our height as a justification. These are the same people who believe women are unable to control weight.

    It is my opinion that this is a double standard. While I believe it is perfectly acceptable to screen based on weight and height, I disagree with those who say it is acceptable to ONLY screen based on height, but that it is not acceptable to screen on weight.

    How does one control height? How does a man become taller? I know many a man who wishes they had this super power.

    Also, I don't know of anyone who claims that incongruent double standard is legit. So I'm stymied on this whole thing.

    The methods suggested in conversations for how men can become taller:
    A. Wear pleasers (I had to Google this because I haven't heard of these. They are high-heels, and not really the same as gaining actual height.)
    B. Hormones. - I had to google this also and apparently there are some substances that might provide a small height gain under the right conditions.
    C. Cosmetic surgery. Apparently, there is a surgery that can add a few inches. My understanding is they cut the femurs and add supports to essentially extend the bones. I assume the soft tissue (muscles, skin, etc) adapts over time and is probably a tough recovery.

    That's frankly horrifying.

    Back a page or few, I wondered whether you might be getting less opposition here to weight-based screening because this forum overselects (in a statistical sense) for people who believe weight loss *IS* possible.

    Like some others, I haven't run across anyone who believes/asserts all of the things that you say you've observed in some women. If I did, I would think they were idiots, frankly - and I don't say things that extreme in public very often. I'm back at: If this were a population of dating candidates, wouldn't you want to know they thought things that silly, so you could avoid them?!?

    Also like some others above, a guy screening in a very strict way for bodyweight in a woman would put me off (even though I'm thin). Partly, that's because I've known some jerk-esque guys in real life (not in my dating pool, BTW) who felt that way, but didn't hold themselves to even remotely similar standards (speaking of hypocrites). Partly, that's because I'm not super appearance-focused myself when it comes to who I find attractive, so appearance-based screening would make me suspect the person was a bit superficial (I recognize that as a prejudice on my part). (I'd feel the same way about women screening for height.)
  • ythannah
    ythannah Posts: 4,371 Member
    psychod787 wrote: »
    One question... would you agree that the brain is a giant supercomputer of sorts?

    Not directed to me but I'll agree anyway.

    The brain is just a mass of neurons firing on and off. Learning, whether academic or social or emotional, is accomplished through repeat firing of neurons in the same pattern, which creates neural pathways.

    Computers are basically also a mass of on/off switches firing in patterns.
  • TonyB0588
    TonyB0588 Posts: 9,520 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    threewins wrote: »
    I truly believe that the vast majority of women are genetically programmed to not date men shorter than them. The proportion of male/female couples where the man is shorter than the woman is so small, much smaller than if random mixing occurred. Which begs the inevitable question: how do lesbians cope? Anyway, I happened to read a paper and it says that gay men prefer a partner who is slightly taller than them.

    I have no idea why we're going with the idea that women are "genetically programmed" (yuck, by the way!) here. Why isn't it that men are "genetically programmed" to be attracted to women who are shorter than them?

    If the relevant data you have on height preferences involves gay men, this would tend to support the thesis that MALE desires that are potentially relevant here too. Given that only one man can be taller than the other in a gay relationship, why aren't you wondering how they're coping instead of lesbians given that there is no data that lesbians even HAVE height preferences (which kind of knocks the women are "genetically programmed" theory into the water).

    I think there might be something to that notion, although I'd say "biologically predisposed" over genetically programmed.

    I remember reading something (long ago) about studies showing men seemed hardwired to subconsciously judge female attractiveness based on waist-hip ratio, which had something to do with indicating childbearing potential. Women likely have similar wiring to select mates for height, which should produce taller offspring, probably with higher chance of survival.

    So there's biological programming in both sexes, just for different criteria. Both based on reproduction, however. Survival of the species and all that.

    I have less objection to the idea that people are generally predisposed to prefer certain traits (with a wide latitude for normal human variations) than the statement that women are somehow "genetically programmed." It just sounds very demeaning.

    There has to be an evolutionary advantage for people getting taller. Why would an species decide to create more animals that require more calories to survive. So, I assert that there could be a sexual preference in women for taller men. Life is turning calories into kids.

    ** edit** I read your post wrong and had to correct myself.

    I'm not arguing that sexual preferences don't exist, I just bristle at attributing them exclusively to women (why can't it also be the fact that men may also prefer women who are smaller than them?) and using terms like "programming," which seem awfully dehumanizing.

    Programmed is a great word to use imho. What else is the brain but a giant super computer? It's making many calculations all at once and directing our actions. I think there are certain things a man is programmed to look at in a mate physically. The Paleolithic Venus statues are great examples. They are thought to be fertility totems. They are over exaggerations of things a man looks at in a potential mate. Large hips, buttocks, breast, and stomach. In the times of our ancient ancestors, a women who had these characteristics was more likely to be able to carry a child to term in times when food availability was uncertain. There are reasons why women may choose to exaggerate certain body features. Aka... push up bras, high heels, high waisted pants. They may think they are "doing it for themselves", but it's an old brain response. We have the old brain and the new brain. The neocortex is the high brain. It makes rational decision making selections. Then we have the old brain. Basically our subconscious. It drives us to do certain things that we rationalize with the new brain. When a man's eye shoots to a gal in tight pants rear end, it's an old brain response. Now that doe not excuse staring because that Is a rational choice. The initial look... all old brain. So, yes WE ARE programmed...

    I don't know that we're that far apart, I just think that "programmed" is a stronger word than I would use. I would go with "generally attracted to." And even within the context of saying that men *tend* to be attracted to certain features in women (at least the men who are attracted to women) and that women *tend* to be attracted to certain features in me (at least the women who are attracted to men), I think we can all think of people who are indifferent to relatively popular features. And we also have examples of how standards of attractiveness fluctuate over time, both of which are not what we would expect to see if we were literally programmed to find certain things attractive.

    These aren't things that are operating at the conscious attraction level of "oooh he/she is hot", these are mate selection criteria that are biologically driven -- produce lots of offspring with higher chances of survival.

    As far as I recall, the waist-hip ratio study was repeated 10? 20? years later and it was still the main criteria for female attractiveness but the ratio had decreased slightly. Again, this was not something identified by the subjects themselves, it was a variable derived from statistical analysis of the results. All the men did was choose between pictures.

    I'm not arguing that our decisions about who and who isn't attractive are operating at the conscious level, I'm arguing that it is more complicated than women being programmed to choose tall men. The truth is that many women do find size to be appealing, but there are also women for whom it is irrelevant and women who are able to prioritize other things than height.

    I'm not arguing against the waist-hip ratio study either. I would argue that choosing which picture one finds more attractive is worlds away from the complex and sometimes lengthy process of choosing a long-term mate, the subject of the OP. The person I find abstractly most attractive may or may not be my choice for a dating partner, sexual companion, or mate.

    From a social-history perspective, it seems odd to me to put the emphasis on *women* being programmed biologically. (Personally, I suspect everyone of any sex has some hardwired inclinations, but tempered by socio-cultural baggage.)

    There are exceptions, but over much of history in many cultures, women have been more chosen than choosing, possibly with some influence but definitely not control over the transaction. Even within my lifetime, "ask her father for her hand" remained as a (largely proforma) nicety, relic of a time when it was required a permission to transfer the woman (a wholly owned subsidiary 😆) from one man's household to another. There have been marriage-by-kidnapping customs (still are or have been recently, in some parts of the world, if friends are to be believed), bride prices, and more. I don't think dowry is a counter-example, I think it's more a "sweetening of the pot" for the overall economic transaction. (As a related aside, if you don't know what "coverture" is, look it up. It existed in law in the US into the 1970s.)

    I do recognize that women's power in these decisions has increased dramatically in many cultures over the last few hundred years, especially the last hundredish, and that's perhaps enough time for some biological rewiring . . . but not much.

    I have no doubt that women ask for and expect silly things via dating site profiles. Many people are silly. I have no doubt that men get hostile reactions from asking for what they see as equivalent things. Many people are touchy. Whether the women making the silly demands are the same women as those having hostile reactions, I have no idea - that would be my criterion for calling it hypocrisy, not simply that both things are true but among different individuals. I do assume that some individuals (all sexes) are hypocrites, of course.
    .
    From what I observe among people I know personally (a biased sample by definition) many people's methods of mate-chosing are pretty irrational, and often work out at least somewhat badly. (IME, even a large fraction of couples who stay together don't seem to like or appreciate each other all that much.) I'm not excepting myself from this at all: My choice (of my husband from early 20s to his death at 45) was not very rational, but in practice I think worked out better than average (by pure blind luck).

    ETA: None of the above intended as disagreeing with Jane, but just as continuing the conversation. Hers was the most recent relevant reply at the time I started writing.

    I love your post. Very true that it was more normal for a man to find a wife, than for a woman to choose a husband. When I chose my wife, I never thought for one moment that she would reject me for being too tall, too short, feet too small, hands too big, etc.

    But of course this thread is about dating, and I'm not experienced in that area. Seems to me that people date a whole lot of boyfriends or girlfriends, and hope that after many years they'd find the perfect man or perfect woman to settle down with.

    And very soon that perfect person of just the right height, seems to start showing their true character, and the relationship comes to an end.
  • Theoldguy1
    Theoldguy1 Posts: 2,496 Member
    edited November 2020
    Mellouk89 wrote: »
    It's google stats, but it may be closer to 18% among the younger generation.

    LOL we are all in our 60's. At 6'2 I was the second shortest in a group of about 10 HS friends at a recent get together. My wife is always used to looking at a picture and I'm one of the taller ones.
  • ythannah
    ythannah Posts: 4,371 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    One question... would you agree that the brain is a giant supercomputer of sorts?

    Not directed to me but I'll agree anyway.

    The brain is just a mass of neurons firing on and off. Learning, whether academic or social or emotional, is accomplished through repeat firing of neurons in the same pattern, which creates neural pathways.

    Computers are basically also a mass of on/off switches firing in patterns.

    Uh-uh.

    Neurons are analog, not digital, huge difference, with *profound* implications. Fundamental implications!

    AI learning, not fully conditioned by the physical world (yet, mostly - super limited input channels, at most). That means no physical bad consequences, and social consequences aren't inherently important to AI. Social factors are not well modeled, yet - simulated only stupidly. Knowledge domains are limited, or AI doesn't work well at all. (It's impressive, in limited domains, like IBM's Watson on Jeopardy - a very complex, quite stunning party trick.)

    Actual human hard-wiring is distributed, in very non-computer-esque ways: Physical reflexes, physically distributed neurally active cells, hormones, more.

    The computer analogy is OK at a *super* high level, if one stands back and squints. Fails up close, at detail.

    Even in AI, pathways don't reinforce in the same way in computers as in bodies (reaction's not just in brains, in human bodies).

    It's a misleading analogy, in most contexts. The closer (more detailed) we get, the worse it is.

    Even the Turing Test threshold hasn't been passed, except in coyly constrained circumstances (Eugene Goostman).

    I'm not saying we can't get there - but we aren't even remotely near there. The analogy is more unhelpful than useful. Too facile.

    Wow, that's interesting! Computers learning wasn't even on my radar, although I have seen 2001 a Space Odyssey :D I think that frightened me off the idea of AI at a young age.

    (I do have a friend who insists AI is much more advanced than "they" allow us to believe.)
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,093 Member

    I
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    psychod787 wrote: »
    ythannah wrote: »
    threewins wrote: »
    I truly believe that the vast majority of women are genetically programmed to not date men shorter than them. The proportion of male/female couples where the man is shorter than the woman is so small, much smaller than if random mixing occurred. Which begs the inevitable question: how do lesbians cope? Anyway, I happened to read a paper and it says that gay men prefer a partner who is slightly taller than them.

    I have no idea why we're going with the idea that women are "genetically programmed" (yuck, by the way!) here. Why isn't it that men are "genetically programmed" to be attracted to women who are shorter than them?

    If the relevant data you have on height preferences involves gay men, this would tend to support the thesis that MALE desires that are potentially relevant here too. Given that only one man can be taller than the other in a gay relationship, why aren't you wondering how they're coping instead of lesbians given that there is no data that lesbians even HAVE height preferences (which kind of knocks the women are "genetically programmed" theory into the water).

    I think there might be something to that notion, although I'd say "biologically predisposed" over genetically programmed.

    I remember reading something (long ago) about studies showing men seemed hardwired to subconsciously judge female attractiveness based on waist-hip ratio, which had something to do with indicating childbearing potential. Women likely have similar wiring to select mates for height, which should produce taller offspring, probably with higher chance of survival.

    So there's biological programming in both sexes, just for different criteria. Both based on reproduction, however. Survival of the species and all that.

    I have less objection to the idea that people are generally predisposed to prefer certain traits (with a wide latitude for normal human variations) than the statement that women are somehow "genetically programmed." It just sounds very demeaning.

    There has to be an evolutionary advantage for people getting taller. Why would an species decide to create more animals that require more calories to survive. So, I assert that there could be a sexual preference in women for taller men. Life is turning calories into kids.

    ** edit** I read your post wrong and had to correct myself.

    I think part of the problem in this branch of the thread is the use of terms that imply or that some people are going to understand as implying a deliberate effort on the part of an intelligent actor controlling human beings (like "genetically programmed" and a species "deciding" to create more animals that require more calories to survive), rather than sticking to terms like "evolutionary advantage" or a common or dominant genetic trait). This seems to be bothering some people, especially when those terms are being used in a way that seem to them to suggest that women but not men are subject to the control of this "genetic programming."

    That's not my problem with it. It's just my observation in reading the various posts.

    Words are words. People can get their underroos in a bunch or not.
    This is not a feminist debate. I'm not getting into that one. I did state that males have selection bias... Are those words acceptable to the court?🤔

    Word choice is meaningful, especially in a debate. I don't think you can really discuss whether or not women are *uniquely* vulnerable to "genetic programming" without wandering into issues of agency and whether or not women are fully human.

    Whether or not *you're* arguing that women are vulnerable to this "programming" while men are more rational, the wording of the original statement certainly could be interpreted that way, which is what I was objecting to.

    No matter what "words" I use, I am going to offend someone. If you are Christian, Islamic, Buddhist, odensist, atheist, believe that Zendu the extraterrestrial dropped us off from the mothership... all have different creation ideas or evolutionary ideas... so, I dont really care if it offends someone with words like "decided" or programmed.

    One question. Would you agree that the brain is a super computer of sorts?

    I think it's a poor analogy. There are still some thing the human brain is better at than a super computer. There are other things at which the super computer vastly outstrips the human brain.
  • threewins
    threewins Posts: 1,455 Member
    edited November 2020
    threewins wrote: »
    I truly believe that the vast majority of women are genetically programmed to not date men shorter than them. The proportion of male/female couples where the man is shorter than the woman is so small, much smaller than if random mixing occurred. Which begs the inevitable question: how do lesbians cope? Anyway, I happened to read a paper and it says that gay men prefer a partner who is slightly taller than them.

    I have no idea why we're going with the idea that women are "genetically programmed" (yuck, by the way!) here. Why isn't it that men are "genetically programmed" to be attracted to women who are shorter than them?

    I

    I've never felt the need to not date women who are taller than me. Height, whether taller or shorter, really doesn't bother me either way. On the other hand I definitely feel that I'd like to date a woman who is slimmer than heavier. I do notice that women care less about a man being heavier.
  • Diatonic12
    Diatonic12 Posts: 32,344 Member
    edited November 2020
    @threewins Women will only date like that if he's loaded to the gills with whopping boatloads of money. If he's fixed, they don't care if he's 50 years older or what he looks like. They'll take it. Not me, not me. That road runs both directions. If they don't care about themselves they're not going to care about you either at some particular point in time. The playing field is level and it all depends if you're willing to settle.

    Our body is the best friend we'll ever have in this life. It carries us all the way to the Finish Line. If you don't care about it then it's Goodbye Kitty and that's all she wrote. It's a reflection of what you hold dear and it goes much further than looks. Looks fade but your body has got to make it.

    I know someone who married an old geezer hoping he would croak the entire time. She got her wish and now she's remarried spending all of the old man's money. She figures she's earned every dime carrying on with a ruse like that. Feigning imaginary love is hard work, that takes skill and some serious dedication. It makes me sick but that's the way some people roll. Not me.