Do women like intelligent men
Theres a good reason why single women should seek smart guys — and its got nothing to do with his career: relationship study
With wonderful intellect comes great responsibility.
It takes a fool to fall in love, but an intelligent partner to make it last according to new research.
General intelligence is a strong indicator of an individuals odds at success in animation, as those with the right stuff are more to experience the sort of academic and professional achievements that get them ahead socially and economically.
In terms of adoration , previous studies have also revealed lower rates of divorce and higher odds of marriage at mid-life among the intelligent sect.
Taking the research a step further, evolutionary psychologist Gavin S. Vance and his colleagues at Oakland University in Michigan set out to explore which factors of a relationship, wonderful or bad, were linked to intelligence — or the lack thereof.
For their new report, published in Personality and Individual Differences, they chose to limited their experiments to heterosexual men, enlisting participa
Why Intelligent Women Join Less Intelligent Men
When I read that Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s late husband was a wonderful man but less accomplished than his wife, I was reminded of “Ivy,” one of the most impressive students I ever had the privilege to teach. Ivy excelled in her coursework, won a prestigious scholarship for postgraduate study in England, went to a top-five law school, clerked for a Supreme Court Justice, and is now a law professor at a great university.
Like Ruth Ginsberg (–, pictured), Ivy married a man who is very nice but less intelligent than she. This is not an unusual situation. I made a list of the dozen most intelligent female students with whom I’ve kept in touch over the years. These women are all spectacularly talented but I estimate that two-thirds married men less intelligent than themselves. Their husbands are not dummies but they are not as impressive as their wives. On a scale of 1 to 10, the women are 10s and their husbands are mostly 7s to 9s.
Why is this? Are all-star women threatened by intelligent men? Do spectacular women want the
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It has long been acknowledged in evolutionary psychology circles that organism intelligent, at least for men, increases one’s attractiveness as a mate to members of the opposite sex.
Researchers such as Geoffrey Miller believe that humor, along with other creative abilities such as art and music, evolved as an honest signal of intelligence and genetic quality. These qualities became part of human essence through sexual selection, as individuals successfully exploited their senses of humor to both compete for mates and to hang on to them after initial romantic infatuations had faded. After all, if one has the confidence to engage in self-deprecating humor (and to do so cleverly!), one must acquire so much quality in reserve that there is no danger of losing status by organism the butt of a joke.
The value of such a skill in defusing tense, aggressive situations and in managing alliances and friendships should not be underestimated either.
So, the assumption is that humor is attractive primarily because it is a stand-in for intelligence.
But
Each year, releases data on American singles (not just those on ), which the media gobbles up immediately. With nearly half of the American population over age 18 identifying as single/dating, marriage trends make for fantastic headlines. But the Singles in America study came with particularly heavy fanfare from women's magazines. I still remember when this piece of research hit my desk, and I leaned forward a little bit in my chair to read its seemingly feminist ink.
After looking into the mating preferences of more than 5, men and women by way of survey, researcher and biological anthropologist Helen Fisher, Ph.D., writes that we are seeing a "Clooney Effect" in this country — a nod to the recent marriage of America's favorite bachelor, actor George Clooney, to human rights lawyer Amal Alamuddin. According to Fisher's numbers, men desire smart, strong, thriving women; 87 percent of men said they would date a woman who was more intellectual than they were, who was better educated, and who made considerably more money than they did, while 86 percent said they were in search of a wo