Probably, since a high-paying career often demands more responsibility.
Ok, that answers the question then. I chose $40k/yr. However it seems worth noting that I think this makes my answer misleading for most purposes so I’m not sure I can learn much meaningful from the poll. I would much prefer to be the partner who earned the larger figure. There are practical, social and psychological reasons why I would find that much easier and expect that all else being equal it is likely to make for a healthier relationship dynamic. Some of those predictions would even be controvertial to express.
It’s just that none of that preference is anywhere near strong enough to make up for having to do a crap load more work but being in a similar financial situation.
I guess you are male, and are thinking of a female spouse, right? I’m thinking that the social reason might be that people expect the man to be the higher earner; and the psychological reason that you’d be more comfortable being the dominant partner.
I’m female, and I have a great husband; and I voted to be the less-earning partner, not only because I don’t like to work my @$$ off either, but because I like my husband to be slightly dominant (his Captain Picard to my “number one”), or at least not to be dependent on me. Few things make a man more unattractive than being needy, either financially or emotionally.
I like my husband to be slightly dominant (his Captain Picard to my “number one”
Are you an Athol Kay fan?
Few things make a man more unattractive than being needy, either financially or emotionally.
Funny how these things can be interpreted. A rich submissive man could see giving a woman money as a submissive act (“she control’s my finances!”), while a dominant man could see it as a dominant act (“I take care of her!”)
Funny how these things can be interpreted. A rich submissive man could see giving a woman money as a submissive act (“she control’s my finances!”), while a dominant man could see it as a dominant act (“I take care of her!”)
What about the other cases? Like, say, a rich humanlike perfect-decision-theoretic agent? Or simply normal people that don’t think dominance or submission are inherent parts of their identities or interpersonal relationships?
I know that myself and a few other of my acquaintances often utterly confuse people who attempt to judge us on a “dominance vs submissiveness” axis, simply because we disregard any notion of “dominance status” and merely act according to some other system that doesn’t correlate well with either “trait”, which creates high variations of “dominant” or “submissive” behaviors in situations that seem strikingly similar to the evaluator.
I’ve been called (more than once) a very “incoherent” person on this basis.
My model is unfortunately not complete enough to reliably give good examples. I only observe those reactions, but I don’t myself understand how my behavior is “incoherent” or “confusing”. From inside, it feels like they’re the ones shackling their thoughts around binary axes and failing to think of things-as-things-are. Nevertheless, I can try.
In the basics, suppose a couple of colleagues and yourself (or schoolmates or somesuch, substitute as appropriate) are discussing a particular project. The D vs S axis seems (i.e. appears to me, though I don’t know if this passes i-turing) to predict that some people will be talking more, offering more ideas, while others will merely align with the dominant-type person/idea that fits their preference, and that these roles will tend to persist throughout instances (e.g. if you have multiple meetings) with people usually keeping their roles.
What does that axis make of people, like me and possibly other LW users, stay in the background analyzing the problem without affiliating with any of the dominant ideas, sometimes outright objecting to some ideas while denying the claim of being affiliated with its “opponent”, and sometimes offering a (presumed) better solution in some meetings when we feel more competent and able to provide one, but not otherwise?
Where, on the axis, do you classify these people?
Are they dominant? But they lack the characteristic trait of imposing their will—they have no followers, they do not grab for attention, they refuse to impose their solution (I used to only impose a solution when any of the alternatives under consideration would be catastrophic within context, but now in hopefully good instrumental rationality I attempt to signal myself as dominant in order to bring about somewhat more optimal outcomes), and only debate so far as to show the superiority of the idea/solution itself or the flaws of other ideas.
Are they submissive, then? Well, I would think not really, since they don’t align to any dominance, fail to signal dependence, and “The Laws of Physics, The Universe, And Everything” sounds like a pretty bad D vs S partner. Maybe they could be considered submissive to some “Logic” or “Physics” entity, but I doubt even D-S axis-minded people would go that far.
Of course, this example seems, even to me, quite contrived, but it’s basically an example of what I observe and experience.
I just act in certain manners which I consider completely natural, without conforming myself to any encompassing conception of self-personality or self-identity—merely acting the way I want to act, of which there is a subset of wanting to do things that I ought to do even when other parts of my brain don’t like it—as long as my memories and theories of my core self hold to the few principles I consider important (of which subsets, etc.). In reaction to my actions, people express (not always explicitly) some sort of confusion over what to expect of my behaviors, since I’m “all over the place” and “incoherent and unpredictable” (nowadays, this is another of those ambiguous comments which I personally take as a good compliment, since we can’t predict what a higher-than-human intelligence would do and all that).
In the context of “romantic” relationships, I’d pretty much be “the kind of people” that deliberately acts in a manner to please their partner (which in my model seems typically submissive), yet does so directly on their own impulse, without asking first, and does things the other might never have asked for or thought of (which in my model seems typical dominant behavior—just do stuff that brings the results and situations you want). All kinds of mixed signals get sent (or so I’ve been told), while from inside it’s basically just that I want to do something and I act on it.
Hopefully this helps understand what I’m saying. I’ve heard one hardcore qualify me as a “chameleon dominant”, where since I just do what I want (and subsets thereof), I’m fully dominant on the axis, but “disguise” myself into a submissive whenever I just happen to want to play such a role. I didn’t really have any problem with that or retorts / counterarguments at the time, and don’t care enough to think about it too much.
What kind of weird boundaries people want to draw around what and which one of those categories they put me in is usually not something I bother caring about unless the intellectual exercise is interesting or my life is on the line (the latter never happened so far, luckily).
Gregory Bateson wrote something about the relationship between status and some behaviors being dependent on culture. For example, the Czar would be watching the peasant children dance, but the Queen of England is waving to the crowd.
Yes, I read Athol’s blog, and that’s where I got the comparison. :-) And you’re right, giving money could be either dominant or submissive. In the latter case, the guy would be emotionally needy, which would be a big turn-off.
Conditioning on this, and all else being equal (assume prior of zero information / even spread of probability distribution), I simply have to take the 40$k. On a zero-information prior, the probabilities dictate that my intellectual time is most likely more important than that of a random other person, and that it is most likely that my job is not an optimal-utility one, such that I can do more good or produce more utility in my spare time than my spouse could in the same spare time obtained with the lower-paying job.
You only need to have an IQ / other measure of social-utility-production above the average (or mean? I haven’t actually worked out the maths, just replaying this from rote-learned stuff) in order for this to hold true, in terms of expected utility when you know nothing a priori about the spouse.
Is all else equal? In particular, do I have to do any more work to earn the $80k than the $40k?
Probably, since a high-paying career often demands more responsibility.
Ok, that answers the question then. I chose $40k/yr. However it seems worth noting that I think this makes my answer misleading for most purposes so I’m not sure I can learn much meaningful from the poll. I would much prefer to be the partner who earned the larger figure. There are practical, social and psychological reasons why I would find that much easier and expect that all else being equal it is likely to make for a healthier relationship dynamic. Some of those predictions would even be controvertial to express.
It’s just that none of that preference is anywhere near strong enough to make up for having to do a crap load more work but being in a similar financial situation.
I guess you are male, and are thinking of a female spouse, right? I’m thinking that the social reason might be that people expect the man to be the higher earner; and the psychological reason that you’d be more comfortable being the dominant partner.
I’m female, and I have a great husband; and I voted to be the less-earning partner, not only because I don’t like to work my @$$ off either, but because I like my husband to be slightly dominant (his Captain Picard to my “number one”), or at least not to be dependent on me. Few things make a man more unattractive than being needy, either financially or emotionally.
Are you an Athol Kay fan?
Funny how these things can be interpreted. A rich submissive man could see giving a woman money as a submissive act (“she control’s my finances!”), while a dominant man could see it as a dominant act (“I take care of her!”)
What about the other cases? Like, say, a rich humanlike perfect-decision-theoretic agent? Or simply normal people that don’t think dominance or submission are inherent parts of their identities or interpersonal relationships?
I know that myself and a few other of my acquaintances often utterly confuse people who attempt to judge us on a “dominance vs submissiveness” axis, simply because we disregard any notion of “dominance status” and merely act according to some other system that doesn’t correlate well with either “trait”, which creates high variations of “dominant” or “submissive” behaviors in situations that seem strikingly similar to the evaluator.
I’ve been called (more than once) a very “incoherent” person on this basis.
Your behavior sounds interesting. Could you give some examples?
My model is unfortunately not complete enough to reliably give good examples. I only observe those reactions, but I don’t myself understand how my behavior is “incoherent” or “confusing”. From inside, it feels like they’re the ones shackling their thoughts around binary axes and failing to think of things-as-things-are. Nevertheless, I can try.
In the basics, suppose a couple of colleagues and yourself (or schoolmates or somesuch, substitute as appropriate) are discussing a particular project. The D vs S axis seems (i.e. appears to me, though I don’t know if this passes i-turing) to predict that some people will be talking more, offering more ideas, while others will merely align with the dominant-type person/idea that fits their preference, and that these roles will tend to persist throughout instances (e.g. if you have multiple meetings) with people usually keeping their roles.
What does that axis make of people, like me and possibly other LW users, stay in the background analyzing the problem without affiliating with any of the dominant ideas, sometimes outright objecting to some ideas while denying the claim of being affiliated with its “opponent”, and sometimes offering a (presumed) better solution in some meetings when we feel more competent and able to provide one, but not otherwise?
Where, on the axis, do you classify these people?
Are they dominant? But they lack the characteristic trait of imposing their will—they have no followers, they do not grab for attention, they refuse to impose their solution (I used to only impose a solution when any of the alternatives under consideration would be catastrophic within context, but now in hopefully good instrumental rationality I attempt to signal myself as dominant in order to bring about somewhat more optimal outcomes), and only debate so far as to show the superiority of the idea/solution itself or the flaws of other ideas.
Are they submissive, then? Well, I would think not really, since they don’t align to any dominance, fail to signal dependence, and “The Laws of Physics, The Universe, And Everything” sounds like a pretty bad D vs S partner. Maybe they could be considered submissive to some “Logic” or “Physics” entity, but I doubt even D-S axis-minded people would go that far.
Of course, this example seems, even to me, quite contrived, but it’s basically an example of what I observe and experience.
I just act in certain manners which I consider completely natural, without conforming myself to any encompassing conception of self-personality or self-identity—merely acting the way I want to act, of which there is a subset of wanting to do things that I ought to do even when other parts of my brain don’t like it—as long as my memories and theories of my core self hold to the few principles I consider important (of which subsets, etc.). In reaction to my actions, people express (not always explicitly) some sort of confusion over what to expect of my behaviors, since I’m “all over the place” and “incoherent and unpredictable” (nowadays, this is another of those ambiguous comments which I personally take as a good compliment, since we can’t predict what a higher-than-human intelligence would do and all that).
In the context of “romantic” relationships, I’d pretty much be “the kind of people” that deliberately acts in a manner to please their partner (which in my model seems typically submissive), yet does so directly on their own impulse, without asking first, and does things the other might never have asked for or thought of (which in my model seems typical dominant behavior—just do stuff that brings the results and situations you want). All kinds of mixed signals get sent (or so I’ve been told), while from inside it’s basically just that I want to do something and I act on it.
Hopefully this helps understand what I’m saying. I’ve heard one hardcore qualify me as a “chameleon dominant”, where since I just do what I want (and subsets thereof), I’m fully dominant on the axis, but “disguise” myself into a submissive whenever I just happen to want to play such a role. I didn’t really have any problem with that or retorts / counterarguments at the time, and don’t care enough to think about it too much.
What kind of weird boundaries people want to draw around what and which one of those categories they put me in is usually not something I bother caring about unless the intellectual exercise is interesting or my life is on the line (the latter never happened so far, luckily).
Gregory Bateson wrote something about the relationship between status and some behaviors being dependent on culture. For example, the Czar would be watching the peasant children dance, but the Queen of England is waving to the crowd.
Yes, I read Athol’s blog, and that’s where I got the comparison. :-) And you’re right, giving money could be either dominant or submissive. In the latter case, the guy would be emotionally needy, which would be a big turn-off.
Conditioning on this, and all else being equal (assume prior of zero information / even spread of probability distribution), I simply have to take the 40$k. On a zero-information prior, the probabilities dictate that my intellectual time is most likely more important than that of a random other person, and that it is most likely that my job is not an optimal-utility one, such that I can do more good or produce more utility in my spare time than my spouse could in the same spare time obtained with the lower-paying job.
You only need to have an IQ / other measure of social-utility-production above the average (or mean? I haven’t actually worked out the maths, just replaying this from rote-learned stuff) in order for this to hold true, in terms of expected utility when you know nothing a priori about the spouse.