When posed the question, "which contributes more to personality - nature or nurture?", a psychologist once replied, "which contributes more to the area of a rectangle - its length or its width?" The simplistic answer, therefore, is that neither one contributes more to a creature's personality; rather, that it's some interdependent combination of
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If you don't mind the inquiry, I'd be interested to hear more about your 'product of stories' model of the issue. Does that imply that individuals are ultimately just players in a greater predetermined scheme?
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Similarly, if our task is as ambitious as analyzing life in all of its complexity, then there is a whole multitude, if not an infinity of factors that become relevant and should be taken into consideration.
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Predisposition, on the other hand, might be something of a murkier consideration.
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You see, where I am from, an individual societal caste and occupation are genetically encoded. The encoding depends on the quality and quantity of food received during the gestation phase - the better and more plentiful the food, the higher the caste. And yet, our lives are far from being predestined - the genetic encoding (like all DNA, actually) can change over time, or be made to change by environmental factors and, again, nourishment.
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Those with low thresholds required for performing given actions might be said to have a predisposition toward those actions - that is, they're inherently more inclined to perform them than the average person might be. They're not predestined to, but they're more likely to.
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Let's start from the record that language keeps of it. For example, you can say about a bad-tempered person that they are *bilious*. In fact, constantly high levels of liver activity and bile secretion result precisely in that kind of disposition. In that respect, the medicine of ancient times was *almost* correct.
Whereas the process by which a fear stimulus receives an active reaction as a response is governed by adrenaline. If somebody's disposition is fearful, the odds are that their kidneys aren't as responsive as they should normally be.
And I could go on.
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The medicine of ancient times...that's the four humors theory, isn't it? How curious to think it came so close to the truth.
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