yes but what about the old days when a man had to go out to kill a dinosaur to feed his family? i would of thought he only had the capacity to give nourishment to x amount of people.
Some animals mate for life.
I feel that monogamy is definitely developed in humans via socialisation. However I am not sure what programmes a human to be more or less monogamous what drives the need for one particular human to desire / need more than one life partner compared with another... It has to be more than something in culture, although culture obviously has an influence.
You should love a person for who they are, it shouldn't be won or lost just because of sex, some relationships survive with no sex at all. Its all about being true to the one you love and trust, and if the sex is great too, well then thats a bonus
I think a certain amount of it can be put down to religion as well, which promoted the whole happy family, thou shall not commit adultery thing. Look at the few societies in the world where religion hasnt really took hold and you will see much more of the tribal polygamous relationships that we had in our past.
I still dont have a fucking clue what this thread about. My guess is you're talking about some sort of wood they make big old style tables out of.
No no, that's misogamy.
- not least the length of time it takes for a human child to be able to look after itself...
Monogamy isn't necessary for that though; in fact the modern nuclear family is probably the most stressful for parents (only single parent families have it worse). In tribal societies kids have loads of aunties who share the child-rearing burden.
I agree that bringing kids up in modern society is probably the most stressful situation that's been forced on families - but the situation itself is an artificial creation which is totally different to any that's preceeded it.
I think that, the last 150-200 years aside, monogamy has been practiced by homo sapiens since our great great ancestors first spunked a human child forth, and probably before that too![]()