"Tigers Don't Eat Tigers"
by
LeRoy_Was_Here
07/07/2008, 8:28 PM #
Phil: Tigers, for instance, eat all sorts of other animals, but they
apparently don't eat tigers, or there would not be succeeding
generations of tigers.
LeRoy: Although I know of no cases of tigers eating tigers, the example does not support your argument, because we are very familiar with lions eating lions. Adult male lions will often kill (and eat) young lion cubs, when those cubs are not their own progeny. This actually can be reproductively fit behavior, as the female lioness may then be prepared to mate with the aggressor; so by doing this, the adult male may actually be increasing the chances of passing on his own genes. Does this apply in any way to human behavior? Well, Genghis Khan was noted for killing all the males of any city that resisted him, and carrying off the females, and personally impregnating as many of them as was humanly possible (and in his case, at least, that was evidently quite a few, as his genetic signature is still very abundant across quite a large stretch of Eurasia even today). A few years ago, there was a very controversial theory advanced by someone (whose name I am forgetting at the moment), which suggested that human rapists were essentially pursuing a genetic strategy of trying to 'sow their seeds' as widely as possible--nothing like the direct approach, in this view.
You should not be surprised to hear that feminists were outraged by that hypothesis.