It should be noted that if you try to fit two multidimensional quantities over a single dimension, one is greater than the other depending on which axis you do the projection. In the case of a married couple in which the woman wants to have sex with her husband every single day, while he is bored and avoids her because of the lack of variety, who has more sex drive?
Besides, making studies without understanding the generation of female attraction is rather moot: the experiment where moderately attractive men simply ask women for sex makes my inner seducer smirk.
In my experience, healthy women experience a sharp surge in sex drive, both in frequence and in variety, when they feel they are in safe environment, both from physical injuries and from social stigmatization.
In my experience, healthy women experience a sharp surge in sex drive, both in frequence and in variety, when they feel they are in safe environment, both from physical injuries and from social stigmatization.
And healthy men don’t?
These sorts of statements always seem loaded to me, when they refer to just one gender despite being applicable to everyone.
I understand MrMind to be implying that they have much more experience with health-induced sex-drive variations among women than they do among men. To conclude that something is true of men based on my experience with women, or vice-versa, is not obviously less biased than to refrain from such a conclusion.
It should be noted that if you try to fit two multidimensional quantities over a single dimension, one is greater than the other depending on which axis you do the projection. In the case of a married couple in which the woman wants to have sex with her husband every single day, while he is bored and avoids her because of the lack of variety, who has more sex drive?
Besides, making studies without understanding the generation of female attraction is rather moot: the experiment where moderately attractive men simply ask women for sex makes my inner seducer smirk. In my experience, healthy women experience a sharp surge in sex drive, both in frequence and in variety, when they feel they are in safe environment, both from physical injuries and from social stigmatization.
And healthy men don’t?
These sorts of statements always seem loaded to me, when they refer to just one gender despite being applicable to everyone.
I understand MrMind to be implying that they have much more experience with health-induced sex-drive variations among women than they do among men. To conclude that something is true of men based on my experience with women, or vice-versa, is not obviously less biased than to refrain from such a conclusion.