#Let's Talk! [iDey#19]
Can MONEY actually buy Love?
Human beings engage in
"conditional mating strategies", basing their romantic choices on environmental
factors like wealth, money, and all money can buy.
Here was a research conducted (some
where in South-East Asia ) to prove that most
people ‘love’ based on money related issues:
“We wanted a better
understanding of the psychological importance of money in the development of
romantic relationships, that way people would have a better perspective of how
to regulate a genuine and healthy relationship, regardless of external factors;
and or the effect of negative influences of such external factors," said
Darius Chan, professor at the University of Hong Kong. Two experiments were
performed on groups of Chinese college students already involved in long-term
relationships. The couples were made to think they were either wealthy or poor
to examine their mating behaviour. In the first study men who felt rich were
less satisfied with their partners' physical attractiveness and were more
interested in short-term relationships than those who were made to feel that
they were poor. However, women who felt wealthy did not make higher demands
regarding the men's physical appearance. In the second study, all of the
wealthy participants found it easier to interact with an attractive member of
the opposite sex than those belonging to a financially disadvantaged class. Also,
more men than women from both wealthy and poor conditions selected a closer
seat to the more attractive people. Wealthy men attach more importance to a
mate's physical attractiveness, setting higher standards and preferring to
engage in short-term mating than those who have less money. However, for
committed women, money may lead to less variation in their mating strategies
because losing a long-term relationship generally has a higher reproductive
cost. The study was so far limited to a particular culture, but this plays a
role for human mating overall, the researchers noted in the paper published in
the journal Frontiers in Psychology. We expect that our findings are likely to
be found in other cultures as well, because the basic mechanisms of mate
selection have been found to be rather similar across culture.
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