Mating Intelligence: Sex, Relationships, and the Mind's Reproductive SystemGlenn Geher, Geoffrey Miller, Geoffrey F. Miller Human intelligence is sexually attractive, and strongly predicts the success of sexual relationships, but the behavioral sciences have usually ignored the interface between intelligence and mating. This is the first serious scholarly effort to explore that interface, by examining both universal and individual differences in human mating intelligence. Contributors include some of the most prominent evolutionary psychologists and promising new researchers in human intelligence, social psychology, intimate relationships, and sexuality. David Buss' foreword and the opening chapter explore what 'mating intelligence' means, and why it is central to human cognition and sexuality. The book's six sections then examine (1) our mating mechanisms -- universal emotional and cognitive adaptations for mating intelligently -- that guide mate search, mate choice, and courtship; (2) how mating intelligence strategically guides our choice of mating tactics and partners given different relationship goals, personality traits, forms of deception, and the existence of children; (3) the genetic and psychiatric causes of individual differences in mating intelligence; (4) how we use mental fitness indicators -- forms of human intelligence such as creativity, humor, and emotional intelligence -- to attract and retain sexual partners; (5) the ecological and social contexts of mating intelligence; (6) integrative models of mating intelligence that can guide future research. Mating Intelligence is intended for researchers, advanced students, and courses in human sexuality, intimate relationships, intelligence research, behavior genetics, and evolutionary, personality, social, and clinical psychology. |
Contents
Toward an Evolutionarily Informed Construct | 3 |
Part II Mate Search and Mating Intelligence | 35 |
Chapter 2 How SelfAssessments Can Guide Human Mating Decisions | 37 |
Chapter 3 Mating Intelligence in Personal Ads | 77 |
Part III Strategic Flexibility in Mating Intelligence | 103 |
Adaptive Long and ShortTerm Mate Preferences | 105 |
Chapter 5 Personality Mating Strategies and Mating Intelligence | 121 |
Chapter 6 Deception and SelfDeception as Strategies in Shortand LongTerm Mating | 135 |
Chapter 10 The Role of Creativity and Humor in Human Mate Selection | 227 |
Chapter 11 Emotional Intelligence Relationship Quality and Partner Selection | 263 |
Chapter 12 Mating Intelligence and General Intelligence as Independent Constructs | 283 |
Part VI The Ecological Context of Mating Intelligence | 311 |
Chapter 13 Brain Size Intelligence and Paleoclimatic Variation | 313 |
Chapter 14 Ecological Constraints on Mating Tactics | 337 |
Part VII Conclusions | 365 |
Frequently Asked Questions | 367 |
Chapter 7 How Having Children Affects Mating Psychology | 159 |
Part IV Mental Fitness Indicators and Mating Intelligence | 171 |
Chapter 8 The Role of Mutations in Human Mating | 173 |
Chapter 9 Mental Disorders as Catastrophic Failures of Mating Intelligence | 193 |
Part V Mating Intelligence and Other Individual Differences | 225 |
An Integrative Model and Future Research Directions | 395 |
Author Index | 425 |
443 | |
Back cover | 455 |
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Common terms and phrases
ability adaptive problems alleles assortative mating Behavior Genetics Buss cognitive context correlation Cosmides courtship creativity cross-sex mind-reading cues cultural desire displays domain-specific domains ecological emotional intelligence Ethology evolutionarily novel evolutionary psychology evolved female advertisers function Gangestad Geher gence genes genetic quality Geoffrey Miller Haselton heritable Human Behavior human mating human sexuality humor appreciation humor production individual differences Journal of Personality Kanazawa Kenrick life-history strategy long-term mating male mate choice mate preferences mate selection mate value mating decisions mating intelligence mating market mating strategies mating success mating tactics mental disorders mental fitness indicators Miller mutation load offspring one’s parental investment percent Personality and Social perspective physical attractiveness potential mates predict psychological mechanisms relationship reproductive success romantic Salovey schizophrenia Schmitt sex differences sexual selection short-term mating Social Psychology Sociobiology sociometer specific status theory Thornhill tion tive Tooby traits variables verbal women York