The results will shock you.
While height, one of the most controversial issues of humanity, never loses its currency, a recent study confirms the saying that 'you will be afraid of what is close to the ground'. Here are the details…
In general, taller people are viewed more positively. Often, for no good reason, they are thought of as leaders or pioneers. On the other hand, what has been said and done about short people has been generally negative.
Short people with big egos are often said to have the 'Napoleon Complex', but no one talks about tall, selfish people having the 'Charles de Gaulle Complex'.
Presumably, humanity's reverence for the longbow comes from primitive times. While formerly living in caves, size was a more important survival feature than it is now. It made evolutionary sense. When a man came to you with a spear, he wouldn't be impressed by your mastery of the law or your ability to tell a really funny joke.
DARK TRIO
On the other hand, a recent study supports the negative theses about short people. A group of Polish scientists suggests that short men are more psychopathic. "Our study provides the first assessment of how dark triad traits relate to height and height attitudes," the researchers wrote in the study of 367 men and women, published in the journal Personality and Individual Differents.
The dark triad is a psychological theory of personality first published by Delroy L. Paulhus and Kevin M. Williams in 2002 that describes three highly aggressive personality types. These personality types include; narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy.
"We have shown that people with high dark triad traits are less satisfied with their height, which may be because they are actually shorter. This is a result of the behavioral syndromes of dark triad traits designed by natural selection to better enable those with shorter stature to compete in life's great challenges," the researchers said. "The series leads us to believe that it may be part of the psychological system," he added.
'DUE ITS DEFINITELY EXISTENCE…'
Monika Kozlowska of the University of Wroclaw in Poland argues that when a person doesn't have a physically frightening or frightening presence, they should impose themselves in other ways and instead be "psychologically spooky", while "seeing stronger makes other people make them look more frightening than they really are." may cause it to be perceived as long,” he added.
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