EscherEnigma
Adventurer
As long as we're dishing out "evidence", I'd like to remind the audience that men are most likely to be assaulted/abused/killed by strange men. Women are most likely to be assaulted/abused/killed by known men.
But quite simply, the "problem" is that there are two competing reproduction strategies. There's the "


'em all" strategy (the man asking for leniency from a judge because he needs to pay child support to eight women for twelve kids). And there's the "one and only" strategy (the "family man" who devotes all his time and resources to one family). Both are undeniably human, but this is one of those "it's all on a bell curve" deals.
That said, why the need to establish chivalry as some sort of genetic predisposition? So that you don't "feel bad" about not agreeing with "if hitting women is bad, hitting men is equally bad"? I got an easy out for that right here: the "don't hit women" rules is a rule-of-thumb simplification of the "don't pick on the weaker" rule as that's way the bell curves work out. Rules of thumb are fine, but don't mistake them for straight jackets and don't forget what they're derived from.
But quite simply, the "problem" is that there are two competing reproduction strategies. There's the "




That said, why the need to establish chivalry as some sort of genetic predisposition? So that you don't "feel bad" about not agreeing with "if hitting women is bad, hitting men is equally bad"? I got an easy out for that right here: the "don't hit women" rules is a rule-of-thumb simplification of the "don't pick on the weaker" rule as that's way the bell curves work out. Rules of thumb are fine, but don't mistake them for straight jackets and don't forget what they're derived from.