I don't disagree that fathers feel protective of their children, it is evolutionarily sensible to do so. However, I still think marriage arises more out of male anxiety over paternity. Marriage age in early periods had always been pretty much immediately after puberty. Today, marriage may function socially to protect girls from too early pregnancies, maybe even more so in the late 19th century, but I doubt this was a concern 3000 years ago. As to the social taboo this is itself created by the existence of the marriage norm to begin with. Economic insecurity arises out of the existence of economic systems, which in turn are part of the notion of ownership which lends itself to patriarchal marriage models. I could agree that marriage has two primary functions in early societies, controlling one's wife and controlling one's daughters. Control need not mean evil intentions on the part of males, but it is undeniable that women have long been viewed as property and marriage has been vital part of that system.
I don't think marriage is inherently bad or that it is still what it was in early societies. The growing education and liberation of women has forever changed what marriage means in our society. A fair argument can be made today for marriage as a social system that promotes security. Of course, it also has significant symbolic meaning to a great many people.
This is technically social engineering not genetic. The sperm sorting doesn't involve any actual genetic manipulation. I don't want to derail this thread with a discussion of abortion, which has had me butt heads with others I mostly agree with because of my slightly more "conservative" views on the subject. Although, in the case of American institutions where sperm sorting is done to choose the sex of a child parents seem to split about 50/50 on the choice of gender. Usually, the gender of the child is chosen on the basis of the gender of their other children when they have them. I think the importance of male children in places like China will decrease with increasing industrialization. Where I live, in Quebec, women don't take the name of their husband and they have the choice of hybrid names or either parent's name for the child.




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