Zer0/∞
No Women's Type
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2022
- Posts
- 18,186
- Reputation
- 26,388
Evolutionary underpinnings
Evolutionary answers to our question find their root in early human history. The argument reasons that since humans evolved out of packs of animals whose social structures featured a dominant male and a group of females; this male-female dynamic may have continued on into modern day life. (Chad had a harem of all the women of the tribe) Proponents of evolutionary theory argue that the dominant male had sexual access to females and usually fought any other male who sought access to supremacy. Thus, male-male relationships were characterized by hostility and competition for access to the females.On the other hand, females in the pack were only intermittently serviced by the dominant male and, at other times, could assuage their sexual desires only with each other. Moreover, the sight of two females engaging in sexual activity may have triggered the dominant male's arousal, as it was a sign that one or both of the females were entering their fertile periods. The offspring that resulted from these unions would therefore be more likely to carry genes that favored bisexuality in women and a positive male response to that bisexuality. The women in the harem couldn't all have chad to themselves to sexually fulfill them and started having sex with each other and because many men are attracted to the sight of lesbian sex, this would have enticed chad to have threesomes with these lesbians and these lesbians would be attracted to the chad in return, spreading their bisexual genes (chadsexuality explained).
Ultimately, evolutionary theory proposes that part of the reason female bisexuality is not only favored over homosexuality, but has the ability to arouse male lust even in the present day, may lie in our genes.