Not sure, just a suspicion. Higher educated people are (afaik) more open and less dogmatic about love & sexuality, so it would make sense.
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Replying to @Research_Tim @RemiGau
But I might very well be wrong, at least according to these two semi-random national surveys http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0092623X.2016.1178675 ….
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Replying to @Research_Tim @RemiGau
Just my 2 pence, but my experiences tend towards the sort of opposite of your hunch actually. That opinions on this topic do not vary as a
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function of being an academic.
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A good predictor of openness to polyamory is somebody if somebody is LGBT, in my experience, and esp T. Trans ppl = esp open-minded bunch.
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That's exactly what these surveys support as well: educational level doesn't matter at all, non-heterosexuality does (and being male).pic.twitter.com/A7MIq7YyR3
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Replying to @Research_Tim @RemiGau
I'm not seeing the trans people thing I mentioned, but otherwise, yes.
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Replying to @o_guest @Research_Tim
Yeah that was more my hunch and personal experience too.
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Replying to @RemiGau @Research_Tim
Not wanting to get too meta, but my experience is also that many academics think academics are all left wing along with various correlated
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liberal and left wing views, but in my lived experience academics have very broad ranging views from extreme right to extreme left.
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Emphasis on the views and not the self-described labels in my comment above.
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