Abstract

Life history theory (LHT) predicts that individuals vary in their sexual, reproductive, parental, familial, and social behavior according to the physical and social challenges imposed upon them throughout development. LHT provides a framework for understanding why non-monogamy may be the target of significant moral condemnation: individuals who habitually form multiple romantic or sexual partnerships may pursue riskier, more competitive interpersonal strategies that strain social cooperation. We compared several indices of life history (i.e., the Mini-K, the High-K Strategy Scale, pubertal timing, sociosexuality, disease avoidance, and risk-taking) between individuals practicing monogamous and consensually non-monogamous (CNM) romantic relationships. Across several measures, CNM individuals reported a faster life history strategy than monogamous individuals, and women in CNM relationships reported earlier pubertal development. CNM individuals also reported more social and ethical risk-taking, less aversion to germs, and greater interest in short-term mating (and less interest in long-term mating) than monogamous individuals. From these data, we discuss a model to explain how moral stigma toward non-monogamy evolved and how these attitudes may be mismatched to the modern environment. Specifically, we argue that the culture of sexual ethics that pervades contemporary CNM communities (e.g., polyamory, swinging) may attenuate risky interpersonal behaviors (e.g., violent intrasexual competition, retributive jealousy, partner/child abandonment, disease transmission) that are relatively more common among those who pursue multi-partner mating.

Highlights

  • Consensual non-monogamy (CNM) refers to any romantic relationship wherein people form consensually non-exclusive romantic or sexual partnerships

  • CNM individuals are presumed to have worse sexual health than monogamous individuals (Conley et al, 2013a) yet report similar or better sexual health practices compared to monogamous individuals (Conley et al, 2012, 2013b; Lehmiller, 2015)

  • CNM individuals’ preference for multiple sexual and romantic partners has been documented across several samples (Morrison et al, 2013; Rodrigues et al, 2016, 2017, 2019; Mogilski et al, 2017, 2019; Balzarini et al, 2018b) and is replicated again in this study using an alternative measure of sociosexuality that separately measures affinity toward short- and long-term partnerships

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Consensual non-monogamy (CNM) refers to any romantic relationship wherein people form consensually non-exclusive romantic or sexual partnerships. Relative to a slow life history strategy, people with faster life history strategies prefer immediate over delayed rewards (Griskevicius et al, 2011), reproduce earlier (Boothroyd et al, 2013; Hehman and Salmon, 2019), have more casual sex (Dunkel et al, 2015; Salmon et al, 2016), experience earlier sexual debut and report greater sexual risk-taking (James et al, 2012), pursue social status via dominance rather than prestige (Lukaszewski, 2015), score higher on measures of psychopathy (e.g., boldness, aggression, and disinhibition; Mededovic, 2018) and dark personality (i.e., impulsivity, antisociality, entitlement/exploitativeness, Machiavellianism, and aggression; McDonald et al, 2012), and are more likely to use psychoactive substances (Richardson et al, 2014) These traits are advantageous in harsh, unpredictable environments to the extent that they help an individual to competitively capitalize on limited resources. A person could theoretically be high or low on either or both measures

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