Hope you enjoyed the last blogs on Virtual Relationships and Online Dating. As a single adult pastor and personally involved in all aspects of single adult issues for over 16 years I am well aware of the impact of online dating. Today, 1 out of 5 relationships begin online and people who once were reluctant to admit they used online dating services are no longer.
Although a very pragmatic article, it has a lot of good factual data regarding online dating and offers fairly objective critiques of the scientific matchmaking of eHarmony, Match.com and Chemistry.com. The article raises important questions about the data these scientists are collecting on relationships and personality types.
These web sites all have full time staff PhDs in the social sciences, anthropology, and psychology that is constantly polling and testing thousands of willing participants that will help people find their best possible match.
Of course this research and development helps these sites become successful, but is all this test tube data reliable and does it take out the mystique of romance and remove the human factor of face-to-face connection? Remember while the data can be very helpful, it will never be infallible. According to some there are advantages and disadvantages to online dating.
Advantages: ~Meeting people existing outside social networks where they would otherwise never meet.
~Meeting people with similar interests, background, and preferences.
~Offers privacy and confidentiality (turns out now this is not necessarily true).
~More convenient than other ways of trying to meet people
~Safer than many other conventional dating methods
The advantage to ‘scientific’ online dating isn’t to come up with some foolproof formula for romantic connection, but it can offer a safeguard to prevent you from making a poor choice.