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This 5-page paper discusses the argument of nature vs nurture, and which is better (or if the argument itself is a waste of time. Bibiliography lists 3 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTnatnur.rtf
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versus nurture. Though much of the literature tends to downplay the debate, considering it, for the most part, as a waste of time and stupidity, it still exists. There are
those who believe that nature, or genetics, plays a role in animal behavior and human development, and no matter what is done on the environmental side, nothing will change DNA
or genetic susceptibility. On the other hand, some researchers point to the idea that "environment triumphs over all," and despite the odds
of strange genes or a weird ancestry, the right environment can produce a Mozart or Van Gogh. What is the truth here?
First, its helpful to understand what, precisely, the argument is about. The debate between nature and nurture first arose from those who
tried to define classical science and philosophy (Wikipedia, 2005). Advocates of the more formalized, or "nurture" view tend to discard the ideas of nature, noting that personal will and environment
are responsible ultimately for behavior (Wikipedia, 2005). Then there are others who point out that certain traits and ways of behavior are, need, "nature" in origin and cant be changed,
no matter what (Wikipedia, 2005). In the meantime, "nurture" is defined as an environment that is not of a genetic factor, one in which generally children are raised - and
this can include the home, the school, social situations and so on (Wikipedia, 2005). "Nature," in the meantime, revolves around that with which a person is born, based on ancestry,
genetics, DNA and so on. The nature theory believes that genes form a trait and are predisposed toward a particular trait (Wikipedia, 2005). Alcoholism, for example, is considered a "predisposed"
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