Disclaimer: My knowledge of PUA comes mostly from third party accounts. I’ve rarely read their own material or seen a self-described PUA in action, and I’ve never tried to implement their techniques myself, so my views on PUA might be inaccurate.
I’m under the impression that both advocates and critics tend to exagerate PUA:
I mean, if you are a normally attractive, or maybe even a slightly lower-than-average attractive man, and you go to clubs where sexually available women go searching for mates, and you approach a lot of these women, then provided you don’t do something terribly stupid or awkward, you have good chances of getting laid. Practice will further increase your chances, but I suppose it’s mostly a matter of learning how to quickly filter out unresponsive women and move to the next target, rather than applying some arcane forbidden mind control tricks.
I’m inclined to believe that most of the controversial stuff like “negging” or NLP is likely overrated, at least until proven effective by proper scientific evidence. Sure, there may be lots of guys using them and getting laid, so they may genuinely believe that they’ve mastered the dark arts of mind manipulation, while in fact the women they score might be clearly seeing through their tactics and choose to go along with them because, hey, these women want to have sex!
Similarly, those who criticize PUA on the grounds that it’s dishonestly manipulative might be underestimating the decisonal autonomy of the women that choose to sleep with these men.
I suppose there are also extreme cases of men who clearly break social rules and even laws in order to have sex, such as targeting severely intoxicated or mentally disabled women, or completely misrepresenting themselves to the point of legal fraud and identity theft, but I assume that these sociopathic behaviors are not typical of most PUAs.
I mean, if you are a normally attractive, or maybe even a slightly lower-than-average attractive man, and you go to clubs where sexually available women go searching for mates, and you approach a lot of these women, then provided you don’t do something terribly stupid or awkward, you have good chances of getting laid.
Above-average attractiveness, 12 years of college parties, 2 years in a fraternity, attended hundreds of parties, bars, and clubs, threw about a dozen parties myself, spoke to thousands of women. Did not hook up once in that manner, even with women who obviously wanted to hook up with me. There is some secret courting dance the male must do at that point, and I don’t know it.
I once threw a party and invited only random strangers, where every single person who attended hooked up with another stranger, except me and my co-host. We left 2 dozen strangers silently locking jaws in pairs in our apartment and went to another party.
After that, took up bodybuilding for a couple of years, and in the second year found it easy to pick up women without ever going to those places.
Above-average or above-median? The latter doesn’t imply the former, as the distribution of male attractiveness is skewed to the right. (I’m asking mostly because of your last paragraph.)
There is some secret courting dance the male must do at that point, and I don’t know it.
Me neither. :-( Well, I might have figured it out recently, but I haven’t met anyone who obviously wanted to hook up with me since.
(Fun fact: a couple of times when I was in Ireland, I would approach nearly every single woman in the club and the only one who wouldn’t turn me down within minutes and I would end up making out with was the one who had approached me first. Then she would tell me that she had a boyfriend, or give me a fake number, and leave.)
I meant above median. But the graph you link to is skewed heavily to the left. Looks like women think something like 15% of men are above-medium attractiveness. I’m probably not on the right-hand side of that graph.
I constructed a graph of the distribution of number of sexual partners from a large dataset. I expected that most women were having sex with a small # of guys. This is true, but it’s also true, to almost as great a degree, that most men are having sex with a small number of women.
There is some secret courting dance the male must do at that point, and I don’t know it.
Ok, obviously there are some men (“non-neurotypical”) which find this part difficult. But my point is that the “secret courting dance” is not some mind manipulation dark ritual.
I once threw a party and invited only random strangers, where every single person who attended hooked up with another stranger, except me and my co-host. We left 2 dozen strangers silently locking jaws in pairs in our apartment and went to another party.
Maybe you should have considered inviting more women than men :D
if you are a normally attractive, or maybe even a slightly lower-than-average attractive man, and you go to clubs where sexually available women go searching for mates, and you approach a lot of these women, then provided you don’t do something terribly stupid or awkward,
Now I don’t know what exactly typical readers of PUA material are like, but few of the people in the audience of the RSD seminars I’ve watched looked like your average jock either. So, I’m under the impression that PUAs are mostly just systematizing stuff that more neurotypical guys just implement in System 1, the way that if you’ve just started learning a language it can be useful to explicitly study grammatical features that native speakers don’t usually consciously think about.
Among the kind of people who read Less Wrong, that’s bigger “if” than you might realize.
That’s why included the clause, “provided you don’t do something terribly stupid or awkward”, and I should add that “awkward” includes failing to send or to respond to non-verbal cues, or generally failing to adhere to normally innate courtship patterns.
I don’t deny that there are people which have difficulties with that, but my point is that these courtship patterns are not ridiculously effective mind control techniques, as both PUA advocates and critics often claim.
Now I don’t know what exactly typical readers of PUA material are like, but few of the people in the audience of the RSD seminars I’ve watched looked like your average jock either.
As I said my knowledge of the matter is superficial, but every time I visited some PUA website, including this RSD thing I’ve just googled, they all looked quite scammy: they are all about some self-proclaimed seduction guru who keeps bragging about his seemingly super-human seductive prowess (completely unfalsifiable, of course) and would happily share his dark secrets with you, for a price. They all want to sell you their books, DVDs, live courses, etc. Seriously, this RSD group you mentioned offers three-day bootcamps for $2,000 - $2,500. That’s one-tenth of the annual tuition for a private US college, and they charge it for three days! Compare to the amount of high-quality, reliable, valuable information you can find for free online on any kind of technical topic, and you’ll see why I think PUA smells fishy.
I’m inclined to think that if there is anything dishonest about the PUA movement, it’s not the sexual hypnosis of innocent women, it’s rather the scamming of gullible, sexually deprived men.
this RSD group you mentioned offers three-day bootcamps for $2,000 - $2,500. That’s one-tenth of the annual tuition for a private US college, and they charge it for three days!
How costly is the average divorce in USA? If “the Game” reduces the chance of a marriage followed by a divorce by 1%, was it worth it?
How much money does an average nerd spend on dating before he gets laid? Is the price of getting 1 sexual patner higher or lower after the RSD seminar?
Prices are sometimes high or low depending on the context you put them in...
They all want to sell you their books, DVDs, live courses, etc. Seriously, this RSD group you mentioned offers three-day bootcamps for $2,000 - $2,500. That’s one-tenth of the annual tuition for a private US college, and they charge it for three days!
Compare to the amount of high-quality, reliable, valuable information you can find for free online on any kind of technical topic, and you’ll see why I think PUA smells fishy.
You may or may not find a rip of those DVDs for free online, if you know where to look. ;-)
(I agree that they’re way overpriced—but they’re nowhere as bad as you’d guess from the advertising.)
My point is that if most detailed information about a subject is legally non-free, the prices are high, and there is no independent verification, the chances of the whole market being largely fraudolent are high.
(I agree that they’re way overpriced—but they’re nowhere as bad as you’d guess from the advertising.)
I suppose they are a bit of common sense and lots of nonsense. It could have some placebo effect, but so does homeopathy.
I suppose they are a bit of common sense and lots of nonsense.
Others have already commented about The Blueprint Decoded.
Foundations seemed to me to be lots of common sense and a bit of nonsense¹: it’s mostly stuff that I’d guess most anywhere-near neurotypical people already know on some level. Of course, Egan’s Law must apply, so it’s not surprising that what PUAs teach isn’t that different from what sexually successful non-PUAs already do.
Transformations is essentially the life stories of a bunch of guys who used to be unsuccessful with women and then started doing PUA. It may be helpful for certain people due to this effect, but then again I’d rather read Feynman’s biography again. (I stopped watching it halfway through it.)
But then again, nearly any educational video whatsoever has a bit of nonsense.
Anyway. The Blueprint Decoded has been recommended by quite a few LWers (from googling I can find this and this, but I’m pretty sure there were more) though I’m under the impression that very little of PUA in general is that good.
y. The Blueprint Decoder has been recommended by quite a few LWers
The Blueprint Decoded.
I add my recommendation of that product… even to those not particularly interested in dating. As a pop-psychology and personal development product it is excellent. In fact it is sufficiently non-specialised that I would recommend those specifically interested in maximising their PUA success to also seek out a more tactical and less identity-based guide to complement it.
They all want to sell you their books, DVDs, live courses, etc. Seriously, this RSD group you mentioned offers three-day bootcamps for $2,000 - $2,500. That’s one-tenth of the annual tuition for a private US college, and they charge it for three days!
The books and DVDs thing is a problem, yes. AIUI, it is quite possible to find high quality free information, but it takes some looking around.
As for the bootcamps; these are some of the highest-profile events in the PUA community. Also, assuming that they actually work with reasonable probability and also generalize to a sustained improvement in social skills, economic/monetary returns for the participants might suffice to justify a significant fraction of that cost.
Disclaimer: My knowledge of PUA comes mostly from third party accounts. I’ve rarely read their own material or seen a self-described PUA in action, and I’ve never tried to implement their techniques myself, so my views on PUA might be inaccurate.
I’m under the impression that both advocates and critics tend to exagerate PUA:
I mean, if you are a normally attractive, or maybe even a slightly lower-than-average attractive man, and you go to clubs where sexually available women go searching for mates, and you approach a lot of these women, then provided you don’t do something terribly stupid or awkward, you have good chances of getting laid.
Practice will further increase your chances, but I suppose it’s mostly a matter of learning how to quickly filter out unresponsive women and move to the next target, rather than applying some arcane forbidden mind control tricks.
I’m inclined to believe that most of the controversial stuff like “negging” or NLP is likely overrated, at least until proven effective by proper scientific evidence.
Sure, there may be lots of guys using them and getting laid, so they may genuinely believe that they’ve mastered the dark arts of mind manipulation, while in fact the women they score might be clearly seeing through their tactics and choose to go along with them because, hey, these women want to have sex!
Similarly, those who criticize PUA on the grounds that it’s dishonestly manipulative might be underestimating the decisonal autonomy of the women that choose to sleep with these men.
I suppose there are also extreme cases of men who clearly break social rules and even laws in order to have sex, such as targeting severely intoxicated or mentally disabled women, or completely misrepresenting themselves to the point of legal fraud and identity theft, but I assume that these sociopathic behaviors are not typical of most PUAs.
Above-average attractiveness, 12 years of college parties, 2 years in a fraternity, attended hundreds of parties, bars, and clubs, threw about a dozen parties myself, spoke to thousands of women. Did not hook up once in that manner, even with women who obviously wanted to hook up with me. There is some secret courting dance the male must do at that point, and I don’t know it.
I once threw a party and invited only random strangers, where every single person who attended hooked up with another stranger, except me and my co-host. We left 2 dozen strangers silently locking jaws in pairs in our apartment and went to another party.
After that, took up bodybuilding for a couple of years, and in the second year found it easy to pick up women without ever going to those places.
Above-average or above-median? The latter doesn’t imply the former, as the distribution of male attractiveness is skewed to the right. (I’m asking mostly because of your last paragraph.)
Me neither. :-( Well, I might have figured it out recently, but I haven’t met anyone who obviously wanted to hook up with me since.
(Fun fact: a couple of times when I was in Ireland, I would approach nearly every single woman in the club and the only one who wouldn’t turn me down within minutes and I would end up making out with was the one who had approached me first. Then she would tell me that she had a boyfriend, or give me a fake number, and leave.)
I meant above median. But the graph you link to is skewed heavily to the left. Looks like women think something like 15% of men are above-medium attractiveness. I’m probably not on the right-hand side of that graph.
I constructed a graph of the distribution of number of sexual partners from a large dataset. I expected that most women were having sex with a small # of guys. This is true, but it’s also true, to almost as great a degree, that most men are having sex with a small number of women.
You’re using the term backwards. (I looked it up before posting my comment, and have just done so again.)
Where did you get your dataset?
At clubs?
At least it makes a good story.
Anyhow, I suspect the secret courting dance involves desperation and lots of awkwardness your first time. Pretty much everything unspoken does.
I’m assuming the two of you weren’t attracted to each other (possibly due to being heterosexual people of the same gender), right? :-)
Ok, obviously there are some men (“non-neurotypical”) which find this part difficult. But my point is that the “secret courting dance” is not some mind manipulation dark ritual.
Maybe you should have considered inviting more women than men :D
Among the kind of people who read Less Wrong, that’s bigger “if” than you might realize.
Now I don’t know what exactly typical readers of PUA material are like, but few of the people in the audience of the RSD seminars I’ve watched looked like your average jock either. So, I’m under the impression that PUAs are mostly just systematizing stuff that more neurotypical guys just implement in System 1, the way that if you’ve just started learning a language it can be useful to explicitly study grammatical features that native speakers don’t usually consciously think about.
That’s why included the clause, “provided you don’t do something terribly stupid or awkward”, and I should add that “awkward” includes failing to send or to respond to non-verbal cues, or generally failing to adhere to normally innate courtship patterns.
I don’t deny that there are people which have difficulties with that, but my point is that these courtship patterns are not ridiculously effective mind control techniques, as both PUA advocates and critics often claim.
As I said my knowledge of the matter is superficial, but every time I visited some PUA website, including this RSD thing I’ve just googled, they all looked quite scammy: they are all about some self-proclaimed seduction guru who keeps bragging about his seemingly super-human seductive prowess (completely unfalsifiable, of course) and would happily share his dark secrets with you, for a price.
They all want to sell you their books, DVDs, live courses, etc. Seriously, this RSD group you mentioned offers three-day bootcamps for $2,000 - $2,500. That’s one-tenth of the annual tuition for a private US college, and they charge it for three days!
Compare to the amount of high-quality, reliable, valuable information you can find for free online on any kind of technical topic, and you’ll see why I think PUA smells fishy.
I’m inclined to think that if there is anything dishonest about the PUA movement, it’s not the sexual hypnosis of innocent women, it’s rather the scamming of gullible, sexually deprived men.
That’s less than a CFAR workshop! ;-)
How costly is the average divorce in USA? If “the Game” reduces the chance of a marriage followed by a divorce by 1%, was it worth it?
How much money does an average nerd spend on dating before he gets laid? Is the price of getting 1 sexual patner higher or lower after the RSD seminar?
Prices are sometimes high or low depending on the context you put them in...
How confident ought I be that “the Game” will reduce my chances of an eventual $200,000 divorce by 1%?
You may or may not find a rip of those DVDs for free online, if you know where to look. ;-)
(I agree that they’re way overpriced—but they’re nowhere as bad as you’d guess from the advertising.)
My point is that if most detailed information about a subject is legally non-free, the prices are high, and there is no independent verification, the chances of the whole market being largely fraudolent are high.
I suppose they are a bit of common sense and lots of nonsense. It could have some placebo effect, but so does homeopathy.
Others have already commented about The Blueprint Decoded.
Foundations seemed to me to be lots of common sense and a bit of nonsense¹: it’s mostly stuff that I’d guess most anywhere-near neurotypical people already know on some level. Of course, Egan’s Law must apply, so it’s not surprising that what PUAs teach isn’t that different from what sexually successful non-PUAs already do.
Transformations is essentially the life stories of a bunch of guys who used to be unsuccessful with women and then started doing PUA. It may be helpful for certain people due to this effect, but then again I’d rather read Feynman’s biography again. (I stopped watching it halfway through it.)
But then again, nearly any educational video whatsoever has a bit of nonsense.
Anyway. The Blueprint Decoded has been recommended by quite a few LWers (from googling I can find this and this, but I’m pretty sure there were more) though I’m under the impression that very little of PUA in general is that good.
The Blueprint Decoded.
I add my recommendation of that product… even to those not particularly interested in dating. As a pop-psychology and personal development product it is excellent. In fact it is sufficiently non-specialised that I would recommend those specifically interested in maximising their PUA success to also seek out a more tactical and less identity-based guide to complement it.
Fixed.
If I copied and pasted that, that might explain why I got so few search results… [tries] Apparently not.
The books and DVDs thing is a problem, yes. AIUI, it is quite possible to find high quality free information, but it takes some looking around.
As for the bootcamps; these are some of the highest-profile events in the PUA community. Also, assuming that they actually work with reasonable probability and also generalize to a sustained improvement in social skills, economic/monetary returns for the participants might suffice to justify a significant fraction of that cost.
That’s a big assumption given the lack of independent verification.