I have no idea. Nor can I think of a good way to test this, since neither of us seems likely to accept women’s self-reporting of the answer as an accurate reflection of what their system 1 is actually doing.
My wild-ass guess is that it’s not even computing anything from scratch in the first place, it’s just reading from a look-up table. (This doesn’t answer the question who wrote that table in the first place, though—but see this.)
I think that’s actually the common model that sex is something women have and men want. So, which of the two simply depends on whether you’re inclined to grant it or not, and on the side you view it from. This may be an unrelated phenomenon to dom/sub (or, alternately, the source of a dom/sub effect.)
That’s an interesting “model”, but it doesn’t seem to be making any predictions here—it fits whether Wilde is right or wrong, so it’s probably irrelevant.
Well, what percentage of women would you anticipate regard it as the former versus the latter?
I have no idea. Nor can I think of a good way to test this, since neither of us seems likely to accept women’s self-reporting of the answer as an accurate reflection of what their system 1 is actually doing.
My wild-ass guess is that it’s not even computing anything from scratch in the first place, it’s just reading from a look-up table. (This doesn’t answer the question who wrote that table in the first place, though—but see this.)
I think that’s actually the common model that sex is something women have and men want. So, which of the two simply depends on whether you’re inclined to grant it or not, and on the side you view it from. This may be an unrelated phenomenon to dom/sub (or, alternately, the source of a dom/sub effect.)
That’s an interesting “model”, but it doesn’t seem to be making any predictions here—it fits whether Wilde is right or wrong, so it’s probably irrelevant.