I wanted to know if the general thought here was that hierarchy is artificially instantiated. — AmadeusD
Is a fact of life. — AmadeusD
... the biology of males [ ... ] Simply put, the necessity for governors, administrators, military, and more for a society to function calls upon the male biology of a hierarchical structure. The female biology of gathering and caring for children [ ... ] gender roles arise naturally ... and women are meant to be the homemakers and child caretakers, while men are meant to be the organizers [ ... ] Most women are simply not capable, by biology — ButyDude
humans can and do make conscious choices and arrive at wildly diverging arrangements of their societies — unenlightened
but it is not universal, and therefore not biologically determined. — unenlightened
Biology trivially determines behavior in the way that physics does. — Apustimelogist
Yes, but what does it mean in the context of a political or social topic like under this thread? — Apustimelogist
With uses of words like 'meant' or 'necessity' in these quotes, I don't see them as justifiable. — Apustimelogist
They assume or presume these things function in some preferrable way or even perfect way in the first place and could not be done in any other way. — Apustimelogist
Arguing the benefits of social norms or hierarchies should have nothing to do with biology — Apustimelogist
If, on the other hand, you want to narrow it to dominance hierarchies and their explanation — AmadeusD
However, I did not claim that. I merely rejected your abjectly stupid claim that biological determinism is somehow worthy of derision as a concept in humans. Risible. — AmadeusD
I disagree, and it seems pretty clear that almost every society shares some similar characteristics - even if you're going to take it by stages. Nomadism -> Tribal living-->larger societies->networks. We move in that direction until forced off the path. The conscious choices being subsequent to self-awareness isn't going to defeat a biological basis for whatever impulse is being over-ridden. I'm also not claiming these are the better attributes, but the biologically determined ones. — AmadeusD
But wouldn't you say that all these examples are very different and societies can live in many different ways? — Apustimelogist
Sometimes its more egalitarian, sometimes more strictly hierarchical. — Apustimelogist
How does that apply to policy when policies are based on specific situations, cultures, socio-economic climates, not the generality of human biology which itself is diverse and results in a diverse range of societies. — Apustimelogist
The fact that some kinds of societies are more common than others too is somewhat incidental. — Apustimelogist
Is there really an "overriding of impulse" if such conditions naturally led to that kind of society? — Apustimelogist
Just as say the conditions that change with a progressed humankind have led our hierarchies to change since 1100 AD "naturally"? — Apustimelogist
They only seem to be different by virtue of volume, and not really behaviour. — AmadeusD
but I can't see that there's any appreciable difference in aim (which would be the determined feature, i guess). — AmadeusD
At best it gets us to the question, again, of which laws are 'counter' to biological factors, and which are 'in line' with them. — AmadeusD
I think its more incidental when societies aren't aligned. — AmadeusD
Most societies develop in the same direction in lieu of over-riding principle-driven resistance. There aren't multiple strains of secular social development, from what I can tell. Just triffling differences in detail - probbaly based on geography, largely. — AmadeusD
My argument, in a given case, would be that if the supporting conditions are that of social enforcement, it would hard to argue it was 'natural' versus something more general. — AmadeusD
where the overarching nature of the society is artificial as no where in nature has that ever occurred without the express intention for that novel situation to satisfy specific, individual sensibilities. — AmadeusD
Could you outline how you feel they have? — AmadeusD
Volume? — Apustimelogist
What do you mean? — Apustimelogist
There is no need to ask "what is in line with biological factors" because what you want is just what is empirically best for that situation — Apustimelogist
You don't think there are big differences between western society now, medieval europe and maybe some prehistoric hunter-gatherer tribe? Sure they may all have some kind of hierarchy in some sense but thats so general its trivial and it isn't even restricted to humans so I don't see how that is useful for anything. — Apustimelogist
Most social behaviors are enforced by ideas of norms and deviance in society, to differing extents of stringency. — Apustimelogist
novel — Apustimelogist
The idea of "natural" makes no sense because biology is in flux — Apustimelogist
No human can survive outside of the tropics without clothes, a completely "artificial" yet now ubiquitious aspect of human society. — Apustimelogist
The idea of artificiality is very thin I think in a biological context. — Apustimelogist
more or less the same — Apustimelogist
Thats totally different. — Apustimelogist
Explanation by implication being that its a different requirement to feed a million than ten thousand. That type of volume-driven difference. — AmadeusD
I mean to say that the aim of the (different) behaviours does not seem appreciably different to me, in these various scenarios, unless purposefully ignored/changed to the societies detriment (noted elsewhere in the comment you quote). And, where that is the case, I don't really understand Humans to be askance from the determining factor simply because it was ignored (on this account.. Im not tied to it). — AmadeusD
"best" reads, to me, on this account, as "what is in line with biological factors(goes to the above response too). The food example was a good one to illustrate that. Hunger Strikes are fine, and have an aim that isn't biological, while over-riding, to the individual's ultimate detriment, the biologically-determined factor of needing sustenance. — AmadeusD
Hm, good. I think I disagree that its general, trivial or avoidable in discussion of social development. — AmadeusD
I agree, as enforcement goes - but I would have to bite the bullet that 'hierarchy' (if this view holds any water) is not a purely social phenomenon. I think it would be very hard to argue that co-operation in obtaining food isn't driven by biological need and state-of-affairs (chemical bonding), even though different systems are clearly social in their contrasts. — AmadeusD
"socially enforced" isnt to imply that there's a conscious intention but that a norm is enforced by the natural (on this view, biologically determined), required behaviour of humans based on their biology in concert with one another toward the organisms aim. Whether that holds weight, who knows. But I'm just wanting to be careful that 'socially enforced' doesn't mean the mechanisms origins are social, but manifest in social relations. — AmadeusD
Not the type of novelty I was expressing there. Conscious choice v natural development due to biological factors. — AmadeusD
The fundamental driving force is the same, in that their is am aim to our organism (though, this is up in the air, i take survival/propagation to be safe assumptions), but the required behaviour may be changing (epigenetics is a spanner in the works) and biology implores us to meet its requirements, regardless. That's the beauty of evolution! — AmadeusD
So then, to me, it's biologically determined that a lack of clothes outside the tropics would, given enough time, extinct the species. Therefore, its biologically determined that we wear clothes outside the tropics to achieve (or,maintain) the overarching aim of the species (non-extinction, plainly put). — AmadeusD
true artificiality and something required by biological function, such as clothes in the example — AmadeusD
Although, fire, being a totally natural product, would do the work with the right organisation. — AmadeusD
But, we absolutely still have serfdom the world over, and in fact more slaves than we've had since the dark ages. — AmadeusD
Many believe the working class is in fact a class of serfs. Not entirely dismissable, i think. — AmadeusD
Sorry, I'm finding it hard to follow what you mean on either of these but nevermind. — Apustimelogist
There's absolutely no reason to bring biology into it. — Apustimelogist
Honestly, do we really care about the biological facts beyond them being a possible means to an end which is ultimately in people's wants and desires? — Apustimelogist
it has no political implication. — Apustimelogist
On the contrary, there's absolutely no reason for me to care about biology if it isn't in line with what I or other people want. — Apustimelogist
I am not sure I would say it exists in the same way that genes and environmental influences are inextricably entwined. — Apustimelogist
tools are not biological — Apustimelogist
I disagree.... There are no pre-determined goals that biological orgamisms are evolving towards. — Apustimelogist
to survive passes on its genes regardless of how or why it survived — Apustimelogist
the fact I may want to keep clothes on me and stay warm has everything to do with my desires and nothing about biology — Apustimelogist
The desires of people are the immediate concern. — Apustimelogist
I just don't see why you need the distinction — Apustimelogist
Another arbitrary distinction. All human technology is "natural" in a similar way. — Apustimelogist
Just means the difference I was talking about is also spatial as well as temporal. — Apustimelogist
Well it's about where you choose to ignore the differences isn't it. — Apustimelogist
something so general as that then it has no political implication — Apustimelogist
No, but their use may be biologically required to fulfil the organism's aim. — AmadeusD
Can you outline why this isn't hitting? — AmadeusD
Particularly this type of claim. I fail to see how the basis for human decision making toward determined goals (if they be all biologically determined, in an extreme example) isn't politically relevant. Could you explain? — AmadeusD
but how that happens seems determined by the biology of the organism. I can't really understand how this isn't the case - plenty of behaviours just aren't open to humans, or dogs, or horses respectively, if they are to survive and propagate.
Ok. But the 'how or why' is actually what we're discussing, surely. — AmadeusD
This is seems very much unserious to me, and akin to saying "I don't drink water because of biology, i drink water because I want to stay alive". I just can't really take that claim seriously. — AmadeusD
Because it is there — AmadeusD
Fire exists without humans — AmadeusD
It is empirically a different situation to the one you implied, though? We, in fact, do still have those institutions you relied on no longer being around. — AmadeusD
If its only a difference of detail, and not of kind — AmadeusD
No, what I have been discussing is whether an 'is' means an 'ought' or whether a 'how' entails a 'meant' — Apustimelogist
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