by AnnaLivia » Wed 23 Feb 2005, 05:29:17
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In Jared Diamond's book Collapse he talks about a small Pacific island called Tikopia that has been continuously densely populated for 3000 years. One of the observations made is that they had voluntarily given up their pigs because they recognized the damage pigs did to the environment. They also had several cultural methods of population control. One was a tradition for people without good prospects to perform suicidally dangerous open sea journeys. Just an example to show that human nature is more adaptable than you think. Societies can control their population (even without the pill) and societies can choose to avoid consuming all of their resources as quickly as possible.
nero, i had to think hard about your contribution, but again i find these people were making choices based on the size of their environment, the numbers in their environment, the resources available, and personal economic factors (as stated, their prospects being good or bad). there is nothing there that enables us to ascribe human nature as the cause of their actions. if the choices they made were wise choices, it speaks to their intellect, not to their human nature. they could have been intrinsically good or intrinsically bad at the heart of it all, and still have made these choices/behaved this way, due to the recognition and acceptance of their circumstances, and practical considerations.
i ask readers to consider: don't extra pressures hurt life's happiness and make people frustrated? does anger come from hurt and frustration? does violence result from anger? it appears evident to me that violence can easily be traced to pressures...has been traced to pressures, yet we keep trying our damndest to trace it to where it is untraceable to, our nature.
Howard Zinn said something like this: it is simple and easy to blame nature for violence. it requires little thought. what is hard is to analyze the social, economic, environmental, and cultural factors that have historically led to violence.
i have not yet read every post that precedes this one (i will), but i will say that to my current knowledge no gene for aggression has been found. as a matter of fact i wonder if any genes have been found for any common human behaviors?
and what does it say, that a mental defect can cause violence? the very fact it is called a defect indicates it's ab-normality according to us, right? a mind with mental
defect is often violent, but a violent human nature is said to be
normal? what's up with that?
nero, you said human nature is adaptable. is it human nature that is adaptable, or is it human behavior that is adaptable? i think we could find vast examples that would illustrate that humans are indeed adaptable, and more adaptable than we may communally and commonly assume, but i have to say i see no proof from this about the nature of human nature. aren't we now in the realm of evolution and biology?
IS human nature adaptable? we need a definition of "human nature" before we can decide if it is, itself, adaptable. (Monte, i hope you are appreciating the effort being made here! i am near wore-out!) i will attempt with this: the constitution we are born with.
but i really can't answer whether that constitution can be said to adapt or not. i do know we adapt behaviors TO something. like stimulus (pressures) in our environment.
when the original statements were made that started this thread...that "human nature is violent", i challenged those statements precisely because they seem to be stating an absolute. and if we are going to accept and say for a certainty that human nature is violent, then i want proof. i think the consequences that could result from this notion are too important for us to be going on assumptions, so i said "please prove that statement".
so far, judging from their own subsequent statements, the people who said it don't appear to really believe what they said. they have contradicted themselves, but they have not owned up to that contradiction outright.
our emotional allegiance to cultural values threatens us far more than any so-called instincts.
and in case some of you have spotted it, yes, i am trying to hone my own debate skills through all of this exchange. yes, i have a second motive here, a "hidden agenda"...but there is nothing devious in this. i will be so bold as to suggest that better debate skills...or call them counter-argument skills...would enable all of us to get the message of peak oil "out there" faster, more effectively, more accurately, to more people.
if you carefully observe what i am trying to teach myself to do here...like anticipating what the opposing argument would be before i ever even posted, like identifying and refusing to be sucked into irrelevant or side arguments, like pointing out attempts to evade, and insisting my "opposition" answer my primary question...some of you might just sharpen your own skills in "the art of persuasion". wouldn't that be a good thing amongst peak-oilers?
i perfectly well know that we are discussing a question that has intrigued and "stumped" the great minds for centuries. (though the preistcrafters will claim they know.) did i really think we would "settle" this once-and-for-all in this forum? all i can do with that thought is laugh.
but i do think this debate itself has great value. both for the secondary reason of improving our abilities to persuade effectively, and because there seems to be general agreement that we are facing a looming situation the exact likes of which we haven't encountered before...one having supreme consequences for us and for those in the future and for our mother earth. are we not all here precisely because we have surmised that the coming changes are of magnitude not to be ignored?
in light of that, delving into the nature of human nature seems more important than perhaps it has ever been, because i am convinced that what we believe about ourselves will affect what we think we are able to do, and therefore affect what we do effect.
Beliefs about human nature can become self-fulling prophecies.
Our brains create possibilities.
and here i would like to place these quotes:
from Emma Goldman: "Poor human nature, what horrible crimes have been committed in thy name! Every fool, from king to policeman, from the flathead parson to the visionless dabbler in science, presume to speak authoritatively of human nature. The greater the mental charlatan, the more definite his insistence on the wickedness and weaknesses of human nature."
and from John Stuart Mill: "Of all the vulgar modes of escaping from the consideration of the effects of social and moral influences upon the human mind, the most vulgar is that of attributing the diversities of conduct and character to inherent natural differences"
to all who have contributed i say thanks for being partners in this dialogue. partners is good. it speaks of unity. annalivia really likes that unity thingee, you know. but hey, she's just an ol' softie who doesn't think people are bloodthirsty lusters for violence.
everybody was nice to everybody in here. good on us.
back to the debate now....because i still maintain that violence is learned response and not natural drive.
the persistence of war is not proof of its origin in human nature.
"O hell, here comes our funeral. Let us pry....for our missed understandings."