Is Monogamy Unnatural? (2024)

Last week, a tabloid newspaper accused a prominent politician of a series of extramarital affairs. The report may or may not be true. But the dalliances of elected officials on both sides of the political aisle—from then-Governor Mark Sanford (R-SC) to then-Governor Eliot Spitzer (D-NY)—raise an important question: Why does monogamy prove so difficult for so many?

And if it doesn’t come naturally to humans, why do so many modern societies insist on it anyway?

Biologist and evolutionary psychologist David P. Barash seeks to answer questions like these in his new bookOut of Eden. It is at once a good introduction to the topic of human sexuality and a useful corrective for those who have read alternative accounts of the topic, most notably the engaging but dubious 2010 bookSex at Dawn. Perhaps most important, the science explained here holds many implications for modern America, where monogamy is losing ground to instincts with much deeper roots in human history.

***

For sexually reproducing species, much of importance can be traced to a single fact: sperm are far more plentiful than eggs. A male can father an almost unlimited number of children if he can get enough females to participate. A female, by contrast, can max out her reproductive capacity even with a single lifelong partner.

By itself, this doesn’t mandate “polygyny,” the form of polygamy in which males but not females are allowed multiple partners. Monogamy does exist in nature, as, of course, do females who seek out multiple partners. But nature does seem to push things in the direction of polygyny on our branch of the evolutionary tree.

Among mammals, just 9 percent of species are monogamous; among primates, just 29 percent are. Humans are a diverse lot, but before Western imperialism, 83 percent of indigenous societies were polygynous, 16 percent monogamous, and 1 percent polyandrous (where women have multiple husbands).

What’s interesting, and frustrating for those looking for clean answers, is that these categories aren’t as exclusive as they seem. Polygynous human societies are only preferentially so: Many men still acquire only one wife, and Barash writes that such pairings were probably the most common throughout human history. Monogamous societies, of course, always have their share of philandering and “serial monogamy,” too. And there may have been a significant shift from polygyny toward monogamy beginning about five thousand to ten thousand years ago, judging by genetic evidence. Some kings and warlords aside, ours is a case of moderate polygyny; we’re not elephant seals, whose harems often number up to 40.

Our polygynous past is very much with us, though, and not just in the contemporary societies that still allow men to have multiple wives: It seems to be built into our very bodies. In nature, species with the strongest polygynous inclinations—those whose males build the biggest harems—also tend to have the most exaggerated sexual dimorphism. There is a violent, high-stakes competition for females within these species, so males evolve to be bigger, stronger, and more aggressive. Indeed, human males are moderately taller, heavier, and more muscular than females, and it’s males who commit the overwhelming majority of human violence.

Polygamous roots are further evident in our sexual “bimaturism.” Among polygynous species, males reach puberty later than females, because in such a violent sexual market, it is unwise to begin competing before one is big and strong enough. Again, this is exactly what we see in humans.

But what about women? Again, polyandry is exceedingly rare as a mating system. Importantly, though, polyandry can exist in some form even when it’s not socially recognized. In humans and numerous other species, females who are officially tied to one partner may have others in secret, the secrecy being necessary to prevent not only social sanctions but also violence and abandonment on the part of males.

There are numerous potential advantages to this behavior, even though (as noted above) it won’t necessarily increase the number of children a female bears. Through adultery, a female might get more resources or higher-quality genes than her partner can provide, for example.

Polygyny plus (a form of) polyandry: That adds up to polyamory, right? Party on!

Well, no. Humans probably didn’t evolve in the sort of peaceful, bonobo-style sexual free-for-all imagined inSex at Dawn. Promiscuous species like bonobos (and the much more violent chimps) engage in a lot of “sperm competition,” because multiple males frequently mate with the same fertile female. Thus they evolve toward that end, with large testicl*s, anatomical equipment designed to remove rival males’ sem*n, and sperm cells designed to do battle with competitors inside the female body.

Humans may have some of these traits—for example, seean intriguing theoryabout the shape of the male appendage—and we are closely related to both bonobos and chimps, as argued inSex at Dawnand conceded inOut of Eden. But we simply don’t have these features to anything like the degree those relatives of ours do. When it comes to sperm competition, the evidence is more consistent with the covert polyandry described above than with the flagrant promiscuity ofSex at Dawn.

What’s more, sexual jealousy appears to be a human universal, seen nearly everywhere to some extent. It’s not an arbitrary cultural construct, as argued inSex at Dawn. The fact of human paternal investment also argues against polyamory. In promiscuous species, fathers rarely invest in their children, instead focusing on impregnating more females, which is a more certain bet because they don’t know which children are theirs anyway.

***

This hints at something modern humans are increasingly having to confront: If we’re not naturally inclined toward monogamy, why force the issue? What do we gain?

It’s odd that so much of the world has adopted this custom if it’s in tension with human nature. Sorting out why that happened is key to figuring out whether it should continue. Here we don’t know the answers with scientific certainty, but Barash provides numerous reasons that cultures could have “evolved” to support monogamy, and they double as reasons to preserve it.

One is just math: Males and females are roughly equal in number, so if one male monopolizes multiple females, society will have to deal with the “excess” males somehow. Otherwise, the result is violent competition over harems. Monogamy, by contrast, ensures that mates are available for nearly all men. Incidentally, this is probably the most compelling argument as to why a society that recognizes gay marriage need not also recognize polygamy.

Joint parenting is another reason monogamy may have developed, especially given that human children are so helpless in their early years. The evidence is clear, cross-culturally as well as within modern societies, that human children benefit from the help of adults besides their mothers. This doesn’t always mean dads; “alloparenting” by grandparents and other adults from the community, sometimes even unrelated males (though this may bring a heightened risk of abuse or infanticide), helps, too. But all else equal, father involvement helps kids survive and succeed, and monogamy aids this investment by ensuring that men know which children are theirs and that each mother has full access to the resources and attention of her children’s father.

Interestingly, there’s some evidence that human sexual relationships develop on a timeline that ensures kids at least get off to a good start before their parents split up, and sexual activity releases hormones that instill a sense of attachment. This “pair bonding” is one reason that monogamy—including lifelong monogamy—is at least possible for humans, even if it doesn’t spring naturally from our biological makeup. Recall that even in polygamous societies, many end up monogamous anyway: It’s a possibility evolution had to deal with.

Relative to polygyny, monogamy may also better serve the interests, reproductive and otherwise, of women. In some cases, women may be better off sharing a high-status man than they would be having a low-status man to themselves. But this is not always the case. Polygyny can (unsurprisingly) happen at the insistence of powerful men: They benefit from having more children, and they shut down the protests of women and lesser men, both by force and by shaping societal institutions to their benefit.

Barash writes that we are essentially a tortoise and a hare tied together to run a race—the tortoise being our polygamous nature and the hare being our monogamous culture, which of course can move much faster than genetic evolution does. But it’s possible that our nature is becoming more monogamous with time. For instance, Barash notes that (according to scientists’ current best guess) the Australopithecine males who lived several million years ago were about 50 percent heavier than females, while modern males are only 20 percent heavier.

***

Barash pays relatively little attention, though, to the developments of recent decades, a tiny amount of evolutionary time that played host to a sea change in the human environment. The long-running trend toward monogamy may be reversing in the developed world.

The decline of marriage in the U.S. is so well-known that it hardly needs recounting here. Today’s adults are divorcing and remaining unmarried at far greater rates than Americans did just decades ago. Forty percent of American kids are born outside of marriage. The parents of these children are usually still romantically involved when the birth takes place, but more often than not, they eventually move on. For whatever reason, the tendency to frequently “re-partner” seems more pronounced in America than in other developed countries.

Unsurprisingly, lifetime sexual monogamy—something Barash calls “exceedingly rare,” probably overstating things a bit—has also evidently fallen. Since 1989, the General Social Survey has been asking Americans how many sex partners they’ve had since they turned 18. When interviewed in their later years, 40 percent of Americans born in the 1930s (a quarter of men and more than half of women) reported at most one. That number fell about ten points among those born in the 1940s, and about ten points again among Americans born subsequently.1No doubt, this partly reflects not changing sexual behavior but the declining stigma of admitting to multiple partners, but presumably much of the change is real, too. (There is no trend in Americans reporting two to three partners. Apparently, relative to previous generations, some are moving into this category while others are moving out.)

Is Monogamy Unnatural? (1)

Like the rise of monogamy, the fall of monogamy is not as well-understood as we might hope. But there are certainly some obvious suspects. Modern economies and welfare states have made men less necessary as providers, especially men who don’t have a lot of money or social status to offer a mate anyhow. Birth control has held out the promise of sex without children, even as most methods often fail. And as Barash would point out, the “traditional” regime was already struggling against our evolutionary history, so a seemingly dominant social institution may have been less secure than it looked.

All of these trends added together are frightening, because none of them are likely to turn around. There are steps that might help torejuvenate marriagein the modern world. There are also ways of mitigating the consequences of non-monogamy; I’vewritten elsewhere, for example, about the potential of virtually failsafe birth-control methods (such as IUDs and implants) to reduce unintended and premarital childbearing. Certainly, it is promising that marriage has held up among the educated, and that even unmarried parents profess to believe in the institution of marriage and all it offers.

Regardless, we might be past Peak Monogamy. Monogamy, after all, does not come naturally; it is not the norm unless a society enforces it as such. There are immense benefits to doing so. But it is unclear how well we humans can achieve this aim in the present environment.

Robert VerBruggen is editor of RealClearPolicy. Follow him on Twitter at @RAVerBruggen.

1. These numbers can be recreated inBerkeley’s SDA systemwith the following inputs. Row: TOTPARTNERS(r:0-1;2-3;4-*). (This is a created variable that simply adds NUMMEN and NUMWOMEN together.) Column: AGE(c: 10, 20). Control: COHORT(c: 10, 1930). Selection filter: NUMMEN(0-989); NUMWOMEN(0-989). (This restricts the data to those who provided numerical answers to both questions; the results change little without it.) The variable SEX can be used to obtain separate results for men and women.

Is Monogamy Unnatural? (2024)

FAQs

Is Monogamy Unnatural? ›

Monogamy does exist in nature, as, of course, do females who seek out multiple partners. But nature does seem to push things in the direction of polygyny

polygyny
Polygyny (/pəˈlɪdʒɪni/) is a form of polygamy entailing the marriage of a man to several women. The term polygyny is from Neoclassical Greek πολυγυνία (polugunía); from Ancient Greek πολύ (polú) 'many', and γυνή (gunḗ) 'woman, wife'.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Polygyny
on our branch of the evolutionary tree. Among mammals, just 9 percent of species are monogamous; among primates, just 29 percent are.

Is monogamy unnatural for humans? ›

Monogamy in humans is beneficial because it increases the chances of raising offspring, but it is actually very rare in mammals – less than 10 per cent of mammal species are monogamous, compared with 90 per cent of bird species. Even in primates, where it is more common, only about a quarter of species are monogamous.

Is it realistic to be monogamous? ›

The answer is simple: being monogamous is not as realistic as everyone thinks. This isn't to say that monogamy isn't possible, but rather that it isn't likely in a relationship meant to last a lifetime. With a national population near 350 million, perhaps there are just too many fish in the sea.

Is monogamy a human construct? ›

While some argue this is because monogamy is a natural human behavior, others suggest that the concept of relationship styles in general has been heavily influenced by society and its expectations as well as by history, culture, and religion.

Is monogamy natural or cultural? ›

Despite the human ability to avoid sexual and genetic monogamy, social monogamy still forms under many different conditions, but most of those conditions are consequences of cultural processes. These cultural processes may have nothing to do with relative reproductive success.

Are we biologically monogamous? ›

While human patterns are distinct from genetic monogamy, defined as two individuals who only reproduce with one another, levels of extra pair paternity are relatively low compared to other socially monogamous species.

Are men biologically polygamous? ›

Polygamy is not the desire for more partners. Men are not naturally polygamous, neither is a woman. Everyone desires more. Interestingly, polygamy only does apply to the married — a bachelor(rette) or a person in a monogamous marriage can't be polygamous — if anything, you're promiscuous.

Can monogamy be healthy? ›

By practicing sexual exclusivity with one partner, individuals reduce their risk of contracting sexually transmitted diseases. Research has linked the stability and emotional support provided by monogamous marriage with better physical and mental health.

What percentage of marriages stay monogamous? ›

This means that of all marriages, 58 per cent are monogamous. Only men in the top 10 per cent of status married more than two women.

When did monogamy become the norm? ›

The answer is that monogamy became the norm for humans millions of years ago. About 10,000 years ago, it fell out of favor, and then just in the last few hundred years or so, monogamy came back.

Who made up monogamy? ›

Socially imposed monogamy was first established in ancient Greece and Rome (even if sexual infidelity with concubines and slaves was largely tolerated).

Is polyamory or monogamy more natural? ›

Franklin Veaux, author of More Than Two: A Practical Guide to Ethical Polyamory, argues that humans are naturally polyamorous, naturally monogamous, and naturally asexual. Humans are remarkably variable compared to any other animal, and therefore comparisons really can't be made.

Were ancient humans monogamous? ›

Monogamy and early humans

According to the New York Times, a 2011 paper showed that early humans, or hominids, began shifting towards monogamy about 3.5 million years ago—though the species never evolved to be 100% monogamous (remember that earlier statistic).

What is toxic monogamy culture? ›

Toxic monogamy dictates that there is a hierarchy for love, with the romantic relationship on top. One must forsake all else—anything that threatens The Relationship, and even at times friends and family—in order to protect The Relationship.

Is monogamy rare in nature? ›

Scientists now estimate that only about three to five percent of the approximately 4,000+ mammal species on Earth practice any form of monogamy. Before the advent of DNA fingerprinting, scientists believed that about 90 percent of bird species were truly monogamous.

What cultures are not monogamous? ›

In many cultures, monogamy is not the norm, and peoples around the world have diverse approaches to coupling and fidelity. For example, under Islam, men may marry up to four women and both men and women may divorce and remarry. Across much of Africa, polygamy (one man with multiple wives) is the norm.

Am I naturally monogamous? ›

This exists when partners don't have a desire to sexually engage other people. They're not working to stay monogamous. This could be because they are just naturally monogamous people, as those people do exist on the sexuality spectrum, but science has proven that on the whole humans aren't naturally monogamous.

Why ethical non-monogamy? ›

Meet needs: For some people, one partner may not be able to meet all their needs, and they may find that through ethical non-monogamy they are able to find ways to meet their needs in a respectful way. These needs could be physical, emotional, spiritual, mental, and more.

What are the arguments against monogamy? ›

Jealousy and Possessiveness: Monogamy can foster jealousy and possessiveness, leading to unhealthy and controlling behaviors within relationships. Critics of monogamy also cite that in marriage, women have historically been viewed as property, which entails an uneven, outdated imagining of relationships.

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