This seems to be another example of looking for evidence to justify a conclusion.
QuoteSeed beetle penises resemble tools of mediaeval torture that inflict internal damage on the female. The female's pain is the male's evolutionary gain as the unwholesome experience dissuades her from mating again with another male
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This is an important point. On a number of levels. But the one I think we need to consider here is, that this demonstrates that living creatures do indeed develop negative notions for what might otherwise be constructive purposes.
QuoteThe first flush of obsessive-addictive love comes courtesy of a spike in dopamine and a dangerous drop in serotonin. Dopamine - the addictive part - causes the euphoria of falling in love and of orgasm. Those pleasant feelings evolved to reward us when we do what is good for our genes. Little surprise, then, that once we acquire a taste for that special somebody, or for sex in general, we want to keep on coming back.
While I'm sure everyone will be as pleased as I am that this researcher managed to fall in love immediately, I suggest that that spike isn't about falling in love at all. It's about experiencing lust. A rather different thing.
For most of us, that first experience of lust turns to major disappointment. For those of us who take a bit longer to get the idea, it leads to a succession of disappointments.
But it teaches us, from an early age, the difference between love and lust. Rather like that beetle, learning through experience, not to play around.
Not a lot to recommend in teenage disappointment to be honest.