Dogdoctor
Canis Doctorius
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2005
- Messages
- 14,786
IMO, mate selection as the driving force behind an appreciation for human beauty is a distinctly plausible hypothesis. But how in the world does one test such an hypothesis? (As you can see, I am not well-read in the theories of evolutionary psychology.)![]()
I am not sure but because of the universality of it, it must be genetic. There are plausible ways that we have acquired an appreciation for the beauty of things other than a mate as a side effect of selecting for another trait. For one thing having that trait is not apparently harmful so if it was secondary to some other trait it would not cause any selection pressure against it. I was reading about the genetics of cave fish a while back and realized that the loss of eyes was probably not selected for but probably occurred because they no longer needed eyes so their was no selection pressure against it.
How to test for it? I guess looking for the exceptions and studying them.