It seems there's some interest in PUA and attraction at Less Wrong. Would that subject be appropriate for a front-page post? I've drafted the opening of what I had in mind, below. Let me know what you think, and whether I should write the full post.
Also, I've done lots of collaborative writing before, with much success (two examples). I would welcome input from or collaboration with others who have some experience and skill in the attraction arts. If you're one of those people, send me a message! Even if you just want to comment on early drafts or contribute a few thoughts.
I should probably clarify my concept of attraction and seduction. The founders of "pickup" basically saw it as advice on "how to trick women into bed", but I see it as a series of methods for "How to become the best man you can be, which will help you succeed in all areas of life, and also make you attractive to women." Ross Jeffries used neuro-linguistic programming and hypnosis, and Mystery literally used magic tricks to get women to sleep with him. My own sympathies lie with methods advocated by groups like Art of Charm, who focus less on tricks and routines and more on holistic self-improvement.
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EDIT: That didn't take long. Though I share much of PhilGoetz's attitude, I've decided I will not write this post, for the reasons articulated here, here, here and here.
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Here was the proposed post...
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When I interviewed to be a contestant on VH1's The Pick-Up Artist, they asked me to list my skills. Among them, I listed "rational thinking."
"How do you think rational thinking will help you with the skills of attraction?" they asked.
I paused, then answered: "Rational thinking tells me that attraction is a thoroughly non-rational process."
A major theme at Less Wrong is "How to win at life with rationality." Today, I want to talk about how to win in your sex life with rationality.a
I didn't get the part on the VH1 show, but no matter: studying and practicing pick-up has transformed my life more than almost anything else, even though getting excellent and frequent sex is, oddly enough, not one of my life's priorities. Nor is finding a soulmate.
If you want lots of sex, or a soulmate, or you want to improve your current relationship, then attraction skills will help with that. Loneliness need not be one of the costs of rationality. But even if you don't want any of those things, studying attraction methods can (1) clear up confusion and frustration about the opposite sex,b (2) improve your social relations in general, (3) boost your confidence, and thus (4) help you succeed in almost every part of your life.
This is a post about what men can do to build attraction in women.c I will not discuss whether these methods are moral. I will not discuss whether these methods are more or less "manipulative" than the standard female methods for attracting men. Instead, I will focus on factual claims about what tends to create sexual attraction in women.
This is also a post for rationalists. More specifically, it is aimed at the average Less Wrong reader: a 20-34 year old, high-IQ, single male atheist.
I will also be assuming the stereotype that many passionate rationalists of our type could benefit from advice on body language, voice tone, social skills, and attire - a stereotype that has some merit. Even if you don't need such advice, many others will benefit from it. I did.
As is my style, I'll begin with a survey of the scientific data on the subject.
Self-help methods in general have not received enough attention from experimental researchers, and attraction methods have fared even worse. That may be what drove the leaders of the pickup community to run thousands of real-life experiments, systematically varying their attire, body language, and speech to measure what worked and what didn't. The dearth of research on the subject turned ordinary men into amateur seduction scientists, albeit without much training.
Still, we can learn some things about sexual attraction from established science.
[full post to be continued here]
a I've also given two humorous speeches on this subject: How to Seduce Women with Body Language and How to Seduce Women with Vocal Tonality.
b I used to be one of those poor guys who complained that "Girls say they want nice guys, but they only go out with jerks!" Merely reading enough evolutionary psychology to understand why women often date "jerks" was enough, in my case, to relieve a lot of confusion and frustration. Even without developing attraction skills, mere understanding can, I think, relieve serious stress and worries about one's manly (fragile) ego.
c Sorry, I don't know much about homosexual attraction, and I'll leave the subject of how women can attract better men to other authors.
Right, I didn't think you thought it was true in every case. I was asking what you think the breakdown of "not-nice nice guys" vs. "genuine nice guys" might be among self-identified "nice guys" who report lack of success with women.
"Actually nice" presupposes a particular definition of "nice." If a guy who is normally high in agreeableness and empathy gets rejected and feels bitter, is he not actually "nice?" If the guy believes that he has a right to sexual contact from women due to positive treatment of her, then yes, that's getting into jerk territory. If he actually faked being friends with her, then yes, that's also departing from conventional notions of "niceness" (though being unable to maintain the friendship after being rejected is not sufficient evidence that the friendship was fake).
However, outside such behaviors, calling a guy "not nice" merely for being resentful and bitter about rejection seems like an example of the fundamental attribution error.
Regardless of whether this belief is true, is it really so beyond the pale as to brand one as not "actually nice"? Have there been any consideration of alternate reasons for men to believe that "women don't like 'nice guy's" other than then not being "actually nice"? To make an analogy, lots of women complain that "men only care about looks." While I know that the complaint isn't true, it's not difficult to imagine how a woman could run into a bunch of highly appearance-focused men, which would lead her to believe something like that with her being not "actually nice."
Couldn't he just be unlucky? Let's imagine that women's preference for "niceness" (whatever that is) is normally distributed, and imagine that the average women indeed has a preference for nice fellows. Yet if a guy has the bad luck to run into a bunch of women below the mean in preferences for "niceness" in a row, he may well get the impression that women in general don't prefer it. That's a reasonable hypothesis based on the anecdotal data he has available. If this guy complains, would you say that he is not "actually nice"?
If you are high in sensitivity, everyone else is a jerk.
Even if women do prefer the components of "niceness" in men, is more always better? Let's say that women on average prefer men who are in the 60-80 percentiles of Agreeableness to men with lower Agreeableness. Yet perhaps more Agreeableness isn't always better, and men in the 80th+ percentiles of Agreeableness are less preferred to men with somewhat above average Agreeableness. Consequently, men in the 80th+ percentile of Agreeableness really do have a correct complaint that women don't want them because they are "nice" (same reasoning applies for altruism, empathy, etc...).
These guys have "overkill" for niceness, yet ironically they might get categorized as not "actually nice" according to your comment. It's possible to believe that men can be rejected on the grounds of being "too nice," and also believe that women do prefer men who display basic human decency.
That being said, female preference for "basic human decency" may be normally distributed, and intelligent/nerdy/feminist women women are probably on the right side of that distribution. I wouldn't expect them to have a very good idea of what women on the left side of the hump are doing.
And those are just the reasonable explanations of the complaint without even assuming that it might be true, for some operationalizations of "nice." The research is all over the place, so it's actually an open question.
That's true. The cry also occurs without a generalized hostility towards women. Unsurprisingly, the men who do make that complaint with generalized hostility towards women are probable more memorable to feminists and female observers. Combined with their own biases, they may be able to read "generalized hostility" into complaints where it isn't really present.
Furthermore, there is no attention towards the base rate of this complaint from men. Anecdotally, tons of guys feel that "women don't like nice guys" at some time or another. Most of these guys probably never complain, and the ones that do are probably mostly not hostile to women as a group (for any meaningful notion of "hostile").
Furthermore, does feeling some temporary anger about a member of another group of humans really make someone "not very nice at all"? Even when it's due to a particular situation that humans are known to handle badly, like rejection?
By that standard, 95%+ of human beings are "not very nice at all." I think it makes more sense to say that "nice" people (of either gender) can have sexist beliefs (about either gender). I heard female friends of mine in college complaining about "men" in ways that I thought were unfair (and which a sufficient zealous men's rights activist could call "hostile"), but I didn't go thinking that they were horrible people.
You're pointing at a generalized hard problem-- how can you tell who's trustworthy enough?
I'm inclined to think that anyone who habitually vents about the awfulness of a group you're part of is riskier for you than someone who doesn't. It may be excessive paranoia on my part that such venting even once is a sign of trouble. Certainly, that level of sensitivity has been encouraged lately, and I've been trying to figure out what's a good level for my quality of life.
There's also the question of people who aren't venting about various groups-- they have sett... (read more)