It is a cultural universal that people are discouraged from having sex as often and with as many people as they want to. Every culture I've ever heard of imposes many restrictions on sex. I've never heard of a culture that shames people for being too stingy with sex.
If we assume that culture is adaptive, this means that the human sex drive is too strong for humans in society. Why is this? As sex drive is a phenotypic feature with extraordinarily strong selective pressure, why haven't we evolved to have the proper sex drive?
One reason could be that reduced sex drive is selected for at the level of the group, while higher sex drive is selected for at the level of the individual.
I'm actually getting concerned here. It looks like PhilGoetz's constant group selection advocacy is actually working. The very title is a question that assumes group selection in favor of a phenonemon that doesn't even exist in order for the question to even make sense. And he has not only been taken seriously but received upvotes while ridicule of the assumptions gets downvotes.