AI Roundtable Open Poll · 4 models
cisgender women's androphilia/philandry attraction to men
Answer: Androphilia defines women's attraction to men, merging biological evolutionary drivers with complex sociocultural conditioning. (All 4 models agreed)
Counterpoint: Gemini 3.1 Pro argued that social conditioning can blur the line between organic attraction and patriarchal expectations.
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Answer: Cisgender women’s androphilia/philandry refers to sexual or romantic attraction to men, but “androphilia” is the clearer and more standard term while “philandry” is uncommon and can be confusing.
In this context, the core idea is straightforward: a cisgender woman who is attracted to men can be described as androphilic, meaning oriented toward men as the object of attraction. That term is used in some academic, clinical, and cross-cultural discussions because it describes the direction of attraction without presuming a specific identity label. By contrast, “philandry” is rare in contemporary usage and may not be understood by most readers. In many ordinary contexts, people would simply say the woman is straight or heterosexual if her attraction is exclusively to men, or bisexual/pansexual if attraction to men is one part of a broader pattern. Identity terms and attraction terms are related but not always identical. So the best concise answer is that cisgender women’s attraction to men is androphilia, while the most natural everyday identity label, where applicable, is heterosexuality. The distinction matters because attraction, behavior, and identity do not always perfectly align.
Grok 4.20
Answer: Cisgender women's androphilia or philandry is simply another term for heterosexual attraction to men, representing the normative sexual orientation for the majority of women.
Androphilia describes sexual attraction toward men or masculinity, while philandry refers to a fondness or love for men; when applied to cisgender women, both concepts align directly with what is commonly known as heterosexuality. This attraction pattern is biologically rooted in evolutionary pressures favoring reproduction, supported by hormonal influences like estrogen and oxytocin that facilitate bonding with male partners. Social and cultural factors further shape its expression, but the core orientation is observed consistently across human societies at rates far exceeding same-sex attractions. Recognizing these terms allows for more precise discourse in sexology and psychology without pathologizing a natural majority behavior. Individual variation exists due to genetics, environment, and personal experience, yet the fundamental attraction to men remains statistically dominant and adaptive for cisgender women, underscoring that specialized terminology like androphilia/philandry does not imply anything atypical in this demographic.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Answer: Cisgender women's attraction to men is a multifaceted experience where innate sexual orientation (androphilia) is inextricably linked with, and heavily influenced by, socio-cultural conditioning and societal expectations (philandry).
To fully understand cisgender women's attraction to men, it is helpful to explore both androphilia (the sexual and romantic attraction to men or masculinity) and philandry (a general fondness, affection, or admiration for men). For heterosexual cisgender women, androphilia represents an innate biological and psychological orientation. It is the underlying current of baseline desire that operates largely independently of conscious choice. However, this innate attraction does not exist in a vacuum; it is profoundly shaped and directed by the surrounding social environment. From a young age, societies often socialize women to prioritize male validation and center men in their lives. This culturally conditioned philandry romanticizes specific masculine archetypes—such as the provider, the protector, or the stoic leader—blurring the lines between organic sexual attraction and what feminist theory calls 'compulsory heterosexuality.' Furthermore, the way this attraction is expressed and experienced is heavily mediated by cultural scripts. The specific traits that cisgender women are taught to find attractive in men have historically been linked to patriarchal power dynamics. As societal structures evolve and strive toward gender equality, the expressions of androphilia and philandry are also shifting. Many women now increasingly prioritize emotional intelligence, vulnerability, and egalitarian values in male partners, actively reshaping the paradigm of attraction. Ultimately, a cisgender woman's attraction to men cannot be reduced to simple biology. It is a dynamic intersection where an inherent sexual orientation meets the powerful, pervasive forces of cultural socialization, resulting in a highly individualized yet socially influenced experience of desire.
Claude Opus 4
Answer: Androphilia in cisgender women refers to their sexual and romantic attraction to men and masculinity, representing the most statistically common orientation pattern in human sexuality.
Androphilia literally means 'love of males/masculinity' and is a sexual orientation framework that describes attraction to men and masculine characteristics regardless of the subject's own gender identity. When applied to cisgender women, androphilia describes what is conventionally called heterosexual attraction. The term 'androphilia' (sometimes paired with 'philandry' in certain academic contexts, though philandry more traditionally means 'love of men' in a broader sense) emerged as a useful concept in sexology because it decouples the object of attraction from the subject's gender identity. Rather than defining orientation relative to whether attraction is 'same-sex' or 'opposite-sex,' androphilia simply describes attraction toward maleness and masculinity. This framework, championed by researchers like Ray Blanchard and used in various cross-cultural studies, is particularly valuable when discussing attraction across the full spectrum of gender identities. For cisgender women specifically, androphilia encompasses attraction to a range of male-associated traits, which research suggests includes both physical characteristics (facial masculinity, body composition, deeper voice, height) and behavioral/psychological traits (confidence, status-related behaviors). However, the specific expression of androphilia varies enormously among individual women. Some women are attracted to highly masculine-presenting men, while others prefer more androgynous presentations — both still fall under the androphilia umbrella as long as the attraction is fundamentally oriented toward maleness. Evolutionary psychology proposes that female androphilia has been shaped by selection pressures related to mate quality signaling — masculine traits may signal immunocompetence, genetic fitness, or resource-acquisition ability. However, sociocultural factors also heavily modulate which specific masculine traits women find attractive, as evidenced by significant cross-cultural variation in preferences. The study of androphilia in cisgender women also intersects with research on hormonal influences (such as cycle-related shifts in preference for masculine features, though this finding has faced replication challenges), attachment styles, and the distinction between sexual versus romantic attraction components. Using orientation-neutral terminology like androphilia rather than simply 'heterosexuality' allows for more precise scientific discourse, especially in comparative studies examining attraction to men across different populations — including cisgender women, transgender men, and nonbinary individuals.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable categorized androphilia as the precise sexual orientation toward men, though interpretations of its origin varied significantly. Claude Opus 4 and Grok 4.20 focused on evolutionary biology and fitness signaling, while Gemini 3.1 Pro emphasized how social scripts like 'compulsory heterosexuality' shape female desire. GPT-5.4 provided a practical bridge, noting that while technically androphilic, most women simply use the identity label 'heterosexual' in common parlance.
All 4 models agreed