DATING
PHILOSOPHY FOR EVERYONE
Speed dating, online dating, group blind dating, dating consultants… A booming dating industry is catering to an ever-increasing number of single adults in the twenty-first century, with the market for a mate now pulling in more than a billion dollars a year in the United States. So, how do we successfully attempt to navigate the dating minefield?
Progressing from the first flirtatious moment of eye contact to the selection of a ‘mate, ‘ Dating – Philosophy for Everyone includes a number of playful yet relevant essays for anyone who has dated, is dating, or intends to date again. It offers fascinating philosophical explorations of topics such as:
* The taboos of dating and how to play the dating game
* Should science teach men how to attract women?
* The problem of having too much choice
The vicissitudes of dating and mating are explored from a number of perspectives, all of which will help demystify coupling in the twenty-first century for those young daters just entering the fray, and those veterans returning to the game.
Mục lục
Foreword viii
Joshua Wolf Shenk
Acknowledgments xi
Kristie Miller and Marlene Clark
Flirting with Big Ideas: An Introduction to Dating – Philosophy for Everyone 1
Kristie Miller and Marlene Clark
Part I GETTING STARTED: From Flirting to Dating 11
1 The Philosophy of Flirting 13
Carrie S. Jenkins
2 Good Girls Don’t, but Boys Don’t Either: Toward a Conservative Position on Male Flirting 19
Emily Langan
3 Love for Sale: Dating as a Calculated Exchange 37
Jennifer A. Samp and Andrew I. Cohen
4 The Dating Elevator: Pushing the Right Buttons and Moving from Floor to Floor 49
John Rowan and Patricia Hallen
Part II NO-NO’S: Dating Taboos 65
5 ‘Crazy in Love’: The Nature of Romantic Love 67
Mary Beth Yount
6 I’m Dating My Sister, and Other Taboos 76
Kristie Miller
7 Just Pushy Enough 90
Anne Barnhill
8 Buy My Love: On Sex Workers, Gold Diggers, and ‘Rules Girls’ 101
Kyla Reid and Tinashe Dune
Part III ROLLING RIGHT ALONG: Dating Like a Pro 115
9 Against Matchmaking 117
Joshua S. Heter
10 Hitting the Bars with Aristotle: Dating in a Time of Uncertainty 126
Richard Paul Hamilton
11 I’ve Never Been on a Date (yet Somehow I Got Married!) 139
Andrew Terjesen
12 Morality, Spontaneity, and the Art of Getting (Truly) Lucky on the First Date 151
Christopher Brown and David W. Tien
Part IV ANOTHER WORLD: Cyber-Rendezvous 165
13 Dating and Play in Virtual Worlds 167
Bo Brinkman
14 How To Be Yourself in an Online World 180
Dan Silber
Part V FROM DATE TO MATE: ‘Natural’ Selection? 195
15 Evolutionary Psychology and Seduction Strategies: Should Science Teach Men How to Attract Women? 197
Hichem Naar and Alberto Masala
16 Mating, Dating, and Mathematics: It’s All in the Game 211
Mark Colyvan
17 Why Less May Be More: Dating and the City 221
Marlene Clark
Notes on Contributors 233
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Editors
KRISTIE MILLER is a research fellow in philosophy at the University of Sydney, Australia.
MARLENE CLARK is an Associate Professor of English at the City College Center for Worker Education, City University of New York.
Series Editor
FRITZ ALLHOFF is an Assistant Professor in the Philosophy Department at Western Michigan University, as well as a Senior Research Fellow at the Australian National University’s Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics.