OK... why wouldn't it apply to lizards? And fish? Insects? If it's so damn adaptive why wouldn't the entire animal kingdom do it? Not to mention by limiting themselves to just "mammalian or primate" they ignore the evidence among birds.
It does. Lots of animals engage in "Force Copulation" as an adaptive strategy. And if you consider "sneaker" satellite males mating with females without them knowing it, among other things, it can apply to fish and insects as well. It does not happen in every species, but a good number, and in the species it does not happen in, it is just not productive for the male to engage in it. The risk is too high.
The primary criticism of this position is that it focuses on rape as a sexual act, a reproductive desire, where rape is usually understood to be multidimensional in motivation; power, sex, and the confluence thereof (see, oh, "Evolutionary Biology, the What and the Chaff" by Dr. F.B.M. De Waal). That does not eliminate adaptation as a partial explanation.
That is an ultimate vs. proximate causation issue on the part of the author. All evolution has to do is ensure the outcome, how it does it and through what causative mechanisms it does this with is irrelevant so long as it is heritable.
It is not adaptive for the FEMALE to be raped. It is only adaptive for the MALE to rape. A big part of the problem here is that you are very very bad at articulating a position. You have not until this most recent post, clarified that as far as I can tell.
Also, there is some good work being done in the peer reviewed lit on this topic.
Oh, yes, that's exactly the same, we all know how a human rapist kills a woman's children fathered by other men before fucking her -- oh, wait, we don't.
Strawman.
What DOES happen in human cultures is that proportionately step children are FAR more likely to be abused than biological children. FAR more likely. Same with adopted kids and foster kids oddly enough. The more investment and the less perceived benefit (adoption is basically evolutionarily and cognitively misplaced parental care. Adoptive parents trick themselves into investing in offspring that are not theirs, while foster parenting is not, they do so out of a sense of decency and civic duty, which is weaker than actual parental care drives)
IF in humans a rapist commonly stuck around to help raise potential offspring that might carry some weight but that's not what happens. In fact, there are mechanisms in place in human societies that makes it more likely the offspring of a rapist will be killed - abortion, infanticide, abandonment.
You have yet to provide any statistics on this. You need to show that throughout human history that these mechanisms have been in place and utilized. You then need to show that the rapist STILL does not receive a reproductive benefit even if they are in place. This is basic evolutionary biology. The rapist is maximizing his reproductive success with little risk (even in a modern society) the evolution of females and even the group as a whole may try to counter this, but in order for it to NOT lead to incentives to rape, they have to drop the fitness of rapists on average to less than or equal to the baseline level it would be at if he were not engaging in rape.
There are human societies where the women raped is at risk of death, which would really cut down on the propagation of these "fertile when raped/raped when fertile" genes.
Irrelevant because the most likely mechanism is victim-selection on the part of the rapist and the violent nature of the rape being more conducive to pregnancy.
Gottschall JA, Gottschall TA. Are per-incident rape-pregnancy rates higher than per-incident consensual pregnancy rates?. HUMAN NATURE-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY BIOSOCIAL PERSPECTIVE Volume: 14 Issue: 1 Pages: 1-20
it's quite a leap to say that because something happens in lions it happens in humans.
No. It is not. We are animals. I hate to break it too you, but the same rules that apply to lions apply to us. The situations and environments differ, often substantially, but the same rules apply. Which means that it is not a leap to explain the same behavior with the same evolutionary mechanisms.
What you are saying is akin to "Animals research is invalid because rats are not people and we cannot generalize" but we can. And we do.