Aye, very much so. I imagine much of this draws from some evolutionary developments, IE, where women maybe developed behavioral tendencies in order to give themselves some kind of an edge in the pecking order of early primitive homo sapien groups. And also to help protect themselves a bit from certain forms of aggressive male behavior.
I also seem to recall that in apes, child rearing is often something that multiple females in a group will take an active role in, regardless of familial relations. This could've been sort of the evolutionary starting point that led to a lot of behavioral quirks we see between women today.
Aye, very much so. I imagine much of this draws from some evolutionary developments, IE, where women maybe developed behavioral tendencies in order to give themselves some kind of an edge in the pecking order of early primitive homo sapien groups. And also to help protect themselves a bit from certain forms of aggressive male behavior.
I also seem to recall that in apes, child rearing is often something that multiple females in a group will take an active role in, regardless of familial relations. This could've been sort of the evolutionary starting point that led to a lot of behavioral quirks we see between women today.