DaveC426913 said:
For the very simple reason that the same society who binds you in marriage, offers you very convenient tools to break this marriage. Furthermore, there is no social pressure to stay in a marriage nowadays in western world (save maybe for highly religious social groups). Divorce became widely accepted. Current statistics looking at the success of marriage after it goes south recognize the fact that very few of them have any chance whatsoever to improve , even in the case the couple gets professional help. That's it, its freaking over in most of the cases. Even if the person stays in such a relationship because he has all the wrong ideas what a promise means (remember, marriage can be dissolved) all he gets is prolonging the agony and pain.
DaveC426913 said:
Why? What are relationships if not agreements and commitments between people?
Close social relationships are much more than that. They are founded on a process of social exchange and neurobiological processes (love, sexual attractiveness). The commitment is just a minor part of it. To put it very bluntly, both as a man and woman you have to deliver high quality content. This is the bulk of a relationship, the content, not the promise. The ongoing process of social exchange is magnitudes more important for the relationship than the promise to enter such a social exchange process.
DaveC426913 said:
I'm not stating 'shoulds' like that. I'm stating what I believe to be why people do get married. Because they want that public commitment. That's not the same as you judging whether their motives meet with your approval.
That's fair enough. And I believe you are wrong. As I said the cornerstone is the ongoing social exchange. There are many ways in which a close social relationship can work. Now let me tell you some of the reasons I bleive ppl get married for, and the list if far from being exhaustive:
- life in two is easier from a socio-economic PoV for the most humans.
- it makes adaptive sense to pair-bond when it takes two to raise children. This relates very closely to the point above. If you look at the statistics of who are the initiators of divorce processes, you will see that as women become more economically independent, they are less likely to stay in a marriage then before.
- again, related to social exchange directly, the case in which the marriage allow both to climb higher in a hierarchy.
- some women feel more secure in a relationship where the power of the state forces the man to support them in the case of a divorce. Especially those with little access to resources.
- a tit for tat in which sex is exchanged for higher status and resources.
- sometimes is simply love, especially in relatively young ppl, but lacking a good social exchange those marriages are doomed in most cases. Love can't last on a empty stomach.
The idea of public commitment is not something really important IMO. Believe me Dave, with every gf I had, my immediate social surroundings knew she is mine and I am hers. It was obvious from our behavior. Besides, a public commitment never puts you "safe" from others wanting to take what is yours. Some married men and women are pretty much players a a public commitment won't stop them from anything.
Close social relationships are very firmly grounded in mundane things which social psychology and neurobiology of human behavior slowly start to unveil nowadays. They are far from being the idealized pictures humans here used to think about them. They are full of beauty and the same time full of ****.
To put it in the words of Spolsky of Stanford neurobiology:
biologically, a terribly confused primate—for example, by anatomical, physiological and genetic criteria, we're not a classic monogamous species, not a classic polygamous one, but somewhere in between, generating huge amounts of literature and Hollywood scandals as a result.
And when you know this and couple it with the social exchange theory, you understand why less and less humans get married. Why we have more divorces now than in past. Why women initiate so many divrces. It falls into place, or at least it does for me.
DaveC426913 said:
That's fine. Some people want to invest in a better commitment than that. They get married.
You miss the point here. You get married and then what ? If the social exchange doesn't work, you have to get the hell away, and fast. Life doesn't wait. A marriage is not intrinsically a better commitment than many other forms of social relationships between 2 humans.
DaveC426913 said:
Again, I am not judging, I am simply stating what I understand to be the princioples behind the importance of marriage.
And I am just offering another perspective.
DaveC426913 said:
I never suggested it is up to me or you. It is up to the couple. However, no one is an island. We often have loved ones who support us. This tends to work.
I am not quite sure I understand what you try to say here, but if you say that you can help others stay in a marriage and change their plans of divorce, I think you should reconsider.
First, there are professionals who fail in this task, I hear once a marital counselor who said that "More often than not we don't solve the couple's problems, we make them get used with the idea they will divorce". Second, more often than not you lack sufficient data on what is really going on there. Some things are far from being readily apparent. Even in the case when the couple in question is very close to you.
DaveC426913 said:
Not when it starts with you telling me I need to "face the truth".
With the exception of the case in which I voluntarily enter a specific chain of command, situation in which I accept any order given to me, no one gets to tell me what I can say or not. You can of course protest it as you did and scream "tautology". But you have to remember that we are on a public board and those posts can be read by many ppl, some for which the tautology may not be readily apparent yet.
DaveC426913 said:
(Imagine if I said something like 'If you call me a *!$#!, well, that makes you a jerk.' Would that be fair to you?)
Sure it would be fair. If I called you "***" I deserve what's coming to me. I'm not very sensitive and besides that, internet communication doesn't worth getting too upset on others.
DaveC426913 said:
I am however, pleased to see that you have given up on the combativeness.
Believe it or not, I am not hell bent on walking over others. As I believe you are not trying to ride high horses on purpose as you do sometimes in your posts. Perhaps both you and I should look in a mirror more often.