"I spent a long time imagining that I’m talking to somebody who is single and struggling, because they’re not meeting people or not clicking with anybody,” Arts & Sciences alum Paul Eastwick ’01 says of writing his new book, "Bonded by Evolution."
Such notions aren’t just unproductive, Eastwick argues—they have been hijacked by an incel culture and a “manosphere” that promotes misogyny and even violence.
“It’s tempting to think that dating and relationships are about competition and where you fit within a pecking order—that you’d better hope you’re a nine, and God help you if you’re a six, but at least you’re not a two,” says Eastwick, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis.
“By taking people through the science, I hope I can get them to think about dating in a way that’s a little less mercenary, and a little less personal: if you’ve been rejected, don’t take it as a sign of how good you are.”
Read Cornellians' interview with Eastwick.