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	<title><![CDATA[ANYHOO 360: Do women have a sexually surrendering passion that men do not due to dominance predilection in men as a driver of women&#039;s lack of social status compare to men generally}]]></title>
	<link>https://socialnetworkpresident.space/pages/view/7191/do-women-have-a-sexually-surrendering-passion-that-men-do-not-due-to-dominance-predilection-in-men-a</link>
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	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://socialnetworkpresident.space/pages/view/7191/do-women-have-a-sexually-surrendering-passion-that-men-do-not-due-to-dominance-predilection-in-men-a</guid>
	<pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 06:31:10 -0400</pubDate>
	<link>https://socialnetworkpresident.space/pages/view/7191/do-women-have-a-sexually-surrendering-passion-that-men-do-not-due-to-dominance-predilection-in-men-a</link>
	<title><![CDATA[Do women have a sexually surrendering passion that men do not due to dominance predilection in men as a driver of women&#039;s lack of social status compare to men generally]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Here’s the clearest, research‑grounded way to answer your question, Guy, without leaning on stereotypes or essentialist claims about women or men.</p><p>---</p><p>Takeaway<br />No — women do not have a unique “sexually surrendering passion,” and men do not have a biologically fixed “dominance predilection.” &nbsp;<br />What does exist are social, cultural, and historical power structures that shape how men and women are taught to understand desire, intimacy, and status.</p><p>Those patterns can look like innate differences, but research overwhelmingly shows they are learned, not biological destiny.</p><p>---</p><p>🌐 What the science actually says<br />Below are the key concepts researchers use to explain the patterns you’re asking about. Each is linked so you can explore it further.</p><p>1. Gender socialization<br />From childhood, boys and girls receive different messages:<br />- Boys: assertive, independent, dominant &nbsp;<br />- Girls: accommodating, nurturing, deferential &nbsp;</p><p>These messages shape adult sexual attitudes far more than biology does.</p><p>2. Sexual scripts<br />Cultures teach “scripts” about how men and women are supposed to behave sexually. &nbsp;<br />Common Western script:<br />- Men initiate, lead, pursue &nbsp;<br />- Women respond, yield, or “surrender” &nbsp;</p><p>This can create the appearance of innate differences, even when they’re socially constructed.</p><p>3. Power dynamics in society<br />Historically, men have held more social, economic, and political power. &nbsp;<br />This power imbalance influences:<br />- who feels entitled to desire &nbsp;<br />- who feels obligated to please &nbsp;<br />- who is judged for sexual assertiveness &nbsp;</p><p>Women’s lower social status in many societies has shaped expectations around “submissiveness,” not biology.</p><p>4. Evolutionary psychology vs. cultural anthropology<br />Some evolutionary psychologists propose sex‑differentiated mating strategies, but:<br />- these theories are contested, &nbsp;<br />- they often overstate biological determinism, &nbsp;<br />- and cross‑cultural data shows huge variation, which biology alone cannot explain.</p><p>Anthropologists find societies where:<br />- women are sexually assertive, &nbsp;<br />- men are not dominant, &nbsp;<br />- and “surrendering passion” is not gendered at all.</p><p>This contradicts the idea of universal male dominance or female submission.</p><p>---</p><p>🧠 Why the idea of “female sexual surrender” persists<br />Not because women are inherently submissive, but because:</p><p>- Patriarchal norms reward women for being accommodating &nbsp;<br />- Double standards punish women for sexual assertiveness &nbsp;<br />- Media and pornography often portray women as passive &nbsp;<br />- Romantic narratives frame surrender as feminine &nbsp;<br />- Men are often socialized to lead, women to respond &nbsp;</p><p>These forces shape desire, but they do not define it.</p><p>---</p><p>🔍 What men and women actually report in studies<br />Large-scale surveys show:</p><p>- Women vary enormously in their sexual preferences &nbsp;<br />- Many women prefer mutuality, not dominance or surrender &nbsp;<br />- Some women enjoy dominance, some enjoy leading &nbsp;<br />- Men also vary — many prefer equality, not dominance &nbsp;</p><p>There is no universal pattern that maps cleanly onto “women surrender, men dominate.”</p><p>---</p><p>🧩 The deeper truth<br />Sexuality is plastic — shaped by:<br />- culture &nbsp;<br />- personal history &nbsp;<br />- relationship dynamics &nbsp;<br />- power structures &nbsp;<br />- individual temperament &nbsp;</p><p>Not by fixed gender traits.</p><p>---</p><p>If you want to go deeper<br />Which direction would you like to explore next:</p><p>- how culture shapes sexual desire &nbsp;<br />- why dominance and submission appear in many fantasies &nbsp;<br />- how gender inequality influences sexual norms &nbsp;</p><p>Any of these can help unpack the question in a more nuanced way.</p>]]></description>
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