>>1659862Actually, extraversion is neither a feminine nor a masculine trait. It's subjective and it all depends upon the society and culture you're living in. If you're from a society where the man mainly works and the woman is mainly a housekeeper, like slavic or some asian cultures, then extraversion is mostly dominated by men, therefore it is a masculine trait.
And if we take into account history, most tribes that succeeded and became towns, cities or even states, have done so by cooperation in the face of adversity (or in this case, other warring tribes), not by pure individual power and therefore introversion.
Although, same thing could be said by the women who established towns in the west by prostituting themselves and funding the rest of the town with some of that profit and therefore creating a society.
In conclusion, extraversion is neither a masculine nor a feminine trait, it's completely subjective upon the individual and is no way mostly masculine or feminine.
If we talk about Agreeableness, then yes, that's a feminine trait, do not confuse the two. One's the nature of a person regarding social encounters, the other is about being empathetic, kind, considerate and warm when already engaged in a social encounter. You can be high in extraversion and low in agreeableness and want to cooperate with others for your own interest, and being a brute about it, see Bullies, or you can be high in extraversion AND agreeableness, and want to cooperate with others and sacrifice more of yourself for the entire group even if it's not in your favour, or not standing up for yourself when it's in your best interest.
(I'm not one of the anons you replied to, but your argument was weak and decided to blogpost about it)