12-06-2015, 11:37 AM
(12-06-2015, 10:37 AM)New Guy Wrote:(12-06-2015, 12:44 AM)izzy Wrote:Hi Izzy,(12-04-2015, 04:57 AM)New Guy Wrote: Hello Izzy,
The points made by the researchers are that in real life morality does matter. More specifically sexual fidelity matters. In the real/fantasy world of Grimm they also matter.
When did Nick kill Juliette?
What episode revealed Juliette was knocked up (pregnant)?
New Guy
LOL. Okay so it is what I thought. When you made this pronouncement:
Quote:Regardless, fidelity is necessary if a couple wants a trusting relationship
you were deliberately trying to denigrate people who are in loving, trusted relationship who as part of their commitment to one another and family are not monogamous, because they do not fit your personal definition of morality. As I said before you should get divinity degree and start preaching your personal views on morality proper.
And it isn’t your moral high horse that frosts my flakes so much as what you say is simply wrong. There are entire cultures/sub-cultures that do not embrace one-man to one-woman exclusive pairings, and guess what those societies and or cultures not only survive but thrive and so do the marriages.
You conveniently went around that so you could poster links again to try and bolster your flawed logic.
Quote:The points made by the researchers are that in real life morality does matter. More specifically sexual fidelity matters. In the real/fantasy world of Grimm they also matter.
No that point is not made by researchers. It may be a conclusion you draw or accept, and one they may attempt to articulate but clearly the data does not support that supposition. The point is only made with people who do not understand sampling, sampling bias, flawed data and analysis.
Is this the research you mention?
http://news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_deta...o?id=10142
It says "Compared to monogamous societies, polygamous cultures see more rape, kidnapping, murder, assault, robbery, fraud, child neglect and child abuse..."
Please describe in detail your allegation of sampling bias, flawed data and analysis. I am sure you can provide a convincing and rigorous proof of your allegation. When you have it assembled you can contact the researchers:
Joseph Henrich, a cultural anthropologist at the University of British Columbia, led the study, working with Richerson and Robert Boyd, a UCLA anthropology professor.
Post a copy of their retraction on the Forum.
New Guy
Aww, it seems I struck a nerve with our resident cut and paster - LOL.
Ever heard of the term ethnocentric?
I stand by my assertions about you, you just keep digging in deeper on your sanctimonious, holier than thou statements regarding other people's relationships.