Andrew never made the claim that Prof. Plomin was in favor of Prof. Murray's policy recommendations. — Walter Pound
DNA is the major systemic force, the blueprint, that makes us who we are. The implications for our lives – for parenting, education and society – are enormous."
"On the science, Plomin has previously expressed his support for Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray’s racial premises in their notorious 1994 book The Bell Curve "
Prof. Plomin doesn't disagree with you there either. — Walter Pound
You’re not related to Greg Handel of Wisconsin, are you? — Noah Te Stroete
It's the opposite. Your distinction is an unnecessary complication.What I am seeking to show is that you can make a valid distinction between nature and nurture without it been an oversimplification. — Andrew4Handel
I am a determinist. I also believe that nature and nurture are one. So that makes me also believe that nurture can't be overcome either. You can't overcome BOTH your genetics or your upbringing. It makes you who you are. If not, you'd be something else.I think you would have to be a determinism to believe nature could not be overcome. — Andrew4Handel
Nature doesn't have goals, like trusting the environment to complete our designs. You imply that nature has a mind.Nature relies on environment to express phenotypes. In the human species, like in no other species including crows, Nature saved a good deal of pre-set guidelines that is info and occupies space in our DNA, by trusting the environment to complete our designs. — DiegoT
This is a great example of how both nature and nurture (the environment) have equal influence on what we are now.The another great advantage, is that in that way the final product will be more adjusted to the actual, ever-changing ecological and social demands of a nomad and socially complex species. The pitfall is that what the snake gets from its blueprints, we need to take from the social womb; if the social womb is sick or poor, we do not mature well. We do not even learn to talk if the environment fails; that doesn´t happen to snakes, which hiss all the same whatever happens around them. — DiegoT
No, they aren't. Sex is determined by biology. The expected behavior of each sex is determined by society. No matter how hard they try, society can't make a man have a menstrual cycle, get pregnant, and have babies.when feminists say that sex is a determined by society, they are right; — DiegoT
when feminists say that sex is a determined by society, they are right; but they aren´t right in assuming that is a bad thing — DiegoT
As I already told Andrew, genes are part of the environment. The other members of your species are made up bags of genes. These bags of genes are part of your social environment. — Harry Hindu
This is a great example of how both nature and nurture (the environment) have equal influence on what we are now. — Harry Hindu
My point in the quote above that, was that nature and nurture are the same. If they are the same thing, then it makes no sense to say that there must be some distinction between them that we can measure.This claim would require quite a fair bit of justification (with data) to support. You would first need to come up with a metric to measure the relative contributions to even begin to utter the words which you have here spoken. If you were to be able to defend this statement in a peer-reviewed manner, you would probably win a Nobel Prize. — MarcRousseau
My point in the quote above that, was that nature and nurture are the same. If they are the same thing, then it makes no sense to say that there must be some distinction between them that we can measure. — Harry Hindu
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