What is monogamy?
monogamy is a practice characterized by the fact that it has a single partner at the moment, unlike polygamy, where people can have more partners. This practice has a number of different forms in the human and animal world and at the beginning of 2000 some important scientific studies have changed the way people thought about monogamy. It is generally considered to have only one partner, to be more advantageous and desirable, although there are certain communities where this does not necessarily have to be a norm.
In real sexual monogamy, people have sex with only another person. It can be for a lifetime, or it can be in the form of serial relationships, and people are moving in a series of sexually exclusive relationships. Having only one sexual partner is considered an important part of marriage in many cultures and sexual relations with people outside marriage can be the reason for divorce or disintegration of a relationship.
Social monogamy involves creating Connecs by someone who shares resources, involving sexual activity and raising a littleThose together. It also often includes sexual exclusivity, but it is not always the case. Social monogamy is not exclusive to people; Many species of birds, which were previously assumed that they were sexually monogamous, have since been revealed as socially monogamous. They create attachments with friends, but they can have sex with other birds. In some cases, even with these external partners bears young.
There are different biological and social benefits that have only one partner for some species who play a role in determining whether species as a whole decide for monogamous relationships or other types of arrangements. Genetics also seems to play a role. In species with a long history of monogamy, genes seem to code rewards for organisms that make up permanent and exclusive links with only one other organism. In these organisms of neurotransmitters that stimulate brain remuneration areas, they are emitted during intEraction, especially close physical, with monogamous partners.
Historically, the belief that people should have only one sexual partner at a time in many human societies. It is common for inheritance rules to follow a patrimonial line, and in many cultures of monogamy, especially in women, it was considered to be of great importance in order for men to be sure that children in their marriage were their own. The valuation of monogamy also contributed to the social attitudes that surround marriage and other types of human relations. It also seems that people are among the species that have a certain genetic predisposition to monogamy.