And it actually offers a concrete solution to the problem of feeling creepy: hang out with more women.
If that works, it might just be that by doing so you learn more about those women’s preferences. In other words, that specific sort of creepitude may just be low skill, and the remedy is practice. That is, it’s not an adaptation firing any more than the fact that an untrained trumpet player produces painfully unpleasant noise (and doesn’t get invited to perform at parties) is an adaptation firing!
What worries me is some folks’ readiness to rationalize exhibiting the low-skill behavior — especially when it comes at others’ expense. “Asking me not to play my trumpet at meetup is just calling me low-status!”
This is different in its causes from deliberate, exploitative creepitude — the person who gets off on blatting their crappy trumpet at others to demonstrate their dominance, or some such …
If that works, it might just be that by doing so you learn more about those women’s preferences. In other words, that specific sort of creepitude may just be low skill, and the remedy is practice.
Yep, I raised that hypothesis in the latter half of my comment.
What worries me is some folks’ readiness to rationalize exhibiting the low-skill behavior — especially when it comes at others’ expense. “Asking me not to play my trumpet at meetup is just calling me low-status!”
I don’t wish to rationalize exhibiting low-skill behavior at all. I think discouraging low-skill behavior is a good idea. In fact, I think it can potentially be valuable negative feedback if done right (see http://lesswrong.com/lw/e5h/how_to_deal_with_someone_in_a_lesswrong_meeting/7daq). I’m hoping my proposed solutions can be done in tandem with discouraging low-skill behavior.
Yep, I raised that hypothesis in the latter half of my comment.
Sure, I wanted to point out that it may well explain away the whole effect, leaving the “adaptation that fires when a man is feeling desperate” explanation looking unnecessary — and excluded by Occam. Flirty skills are skills and follow the usual patterns for skills; that they’re involved in reproduction doesn’t give them any more evopsych fairy dust than (say) language or music. (Which get a lot, but they don’t get “being bad at singing is an adaptation”.)
I don’t wish to rationalize exhibiting low-skill behavior at all.
I didn’t think you did — “some folks” was meant to imply “not you, at least not here”. But some people do that. See, for instance, Elevatorgate and any number of other cases where folks readily engage in motivated search to find reasons to stick up for the creeper at the expense of the creeped.
If that works, it might just be that by doing so you learn more about those women’s preferences. In other words, that specific sort of creepitude may just be low skill, and the remedy is practice. That is, it’s not an adaptation firing any more than the fact that an untrained trumpet player produces painfully unpleasant noise (and doesn’t get invited to perform at parties) is an adaptation firing!
What worries me is some folks’ readiness to rationalize exhibiting the low-skill behavior — especially when it comes at others’ expense. “Asking me not to play my trumpet at meetup is just calling me low-status!”
This is different in its causes from deliberate, exploitative creepitude — the person who gets off on blatting their crappy trumpet at others to demonstrate their dominance, or some such …
Yep, I raised that hypothesis in the latter half of my comment.
I don’t wish to rationalize exhibiting low-skill behavior at all. I think discouraging low-skill behavior is a good idea. In fact, I think it can potentially be valuable negative feedback if done right (see http://lesswrong.com/lw/e5h/how_to_deal_with_someone_in_a_lesswrong_meeting/7daq). I’m hoping my proposed solutions can be done in tandem with discouraging low-skill behavior.
Sure, I wanted to point out that it may well explain away the whole effect, leaving the “adaptation that fires when a man is feeling desperate” explanation looking unnecessary — and excluded by Occam. Flirty skills are skills and follow the usual patterns for skills; that they’re involved in reproduction doesn’t give them any more evopsych fairy dust than (say) language or music. (Which get a lot, but they don’t get “being bad at singing is an adaptation”.)
I didn’t think you did — “some folks” was meant to imply “not you, at least not here”. But some people do that. See, for instance, Elevatorgate and any number of other cases where folks readily engage in motivated search to find reasons to stick up for the creeper at the expense of the creeped.