Klippy
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History is filled with acts of great humanity and compassion, but also with acts of great inhumanity and cruelty. But are people, by nature, evil or good?
I've always thought it was a case of people being inherently ignorant. Being good or evil sounds too black and white when you consider the how and why factors behind them both. We're all born without any first hand knowledge of the world, and we continuously learn and perceive things in our surroundings that fuel natural human emotions. I believe it's completely environmental. It depends on how a person adjusts themselves to what's around them. It could be the case that one can feel better gratification in doing good deeds, or throw personal resentment into the picture by acting in ways society would condemn.
Children's behavioral styles at age 3 are linked to their adult personality traits at age 26.
Caspi A1, Harrington H, Milne B, Amell JW, Theodore RF, Moffitt TE.
Abstract
We observed 1,000 3-year-old children who exhibited five temperament types: Undercontrolled, Inhibited, Confident, Reserved, and Well-adjusted. Twenty-three years later, we reexamined 96% of the children as adults, using multiple methods of comprehensive personality assessment, including both self- and informant-reports. These longitudinal data provide the longest and strongest evidence to date that children's early-emerging behavioral styles can foretell their characteristic behaviors, thoughts, and feelings as adults, pointing to the foundations of the human personality in the early years of life.
PMID: 12901429 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
I've always thought it was a case of people being inherently ignorant. Being good or evil sounds too black and white when you consider the how and why factors behind them both. We're all born without any first hand knowledge of the world, and we continuously learn and perceive things in our surroundings that fuel natural human emotions. I believe it's completely environmental. It depends on how a person adjusts themselves to what's around them. It could be the case that one can feel better gratification in doing good deeds, or throw personal resentment into the picture by acting in ways society would condemn.
But if humans are born blank slates, how did the concept of good or bad originate in the first place? When and what was the beginning of good/evil? Or are both things simply just constructs made by us to define things that we agree or disagree with other people doing?Humans aren't inherently either of these things. They're blank slates. Babies completely absorb everything from their birth and grow based on that, they aren't born good people. They learn everything from the world around them, whether its good or bad.
That's just my opinion though...
But if humans are born blank slates, how did the concept of good or bad originate in the first place? When and what was the beginning of good/evil? Or are both things simply just constructs made by us to define things that we agree or disagree with other people doing?
Are certain good and evil acts truly the way they are or are they just what WE perceive them to be?
This is actually a major topic in the discussion of the philosophies of Legalism and Confucianism.
(I'm sorry, I actually find AP World History fairly fascinating.)
Legalism argues that humans are inherently evil, and must be strictly punished for every misdeed. This was a central ideal of the Qin Dynasty and a major influence that shaped Imperial China's history. Capital punishment was common, and other forms of torture and discipline were used for the purpose of preventing people from doing wrong things. Ironically enough, the government was toppled in a giant insurrection only sixteen years after the ascension of Emperor Qin.
Afterwards, the Han Dynasty embraced the more philanthropic methodology of Confucianism, while still keeping some of the less fascist elements of Legalism. Confucianism argues that humans are inherently good, and can be taught to be civilized, benevolent, and compassionate. It encouraged socioethical harmony, respect, and self-improvement. Aside from a short interruption, the Han Dynasty lasted for a solid 400 years and supported a strong and highly cultivated society.
Comparing these two different dynasties whose governing methodologies were directly motivated by the two philosophies, we can see which is more stable, and thus probably closer to the truth.
tl;dr people are good
That's just a matter of ability. We "destroy our planet" because we're more able to cause changes on a global scale.Aren't these behaviors also found in other intelligent species such as chimpanzees and dolphins? But that doesn't explain why we humans are capable of destroying our own planet, or those other intelligent specimens would've done so themselves, making us question natural selection if we were meant to be the only dominant species on this planet and that it's the other organisms' fault for failing to adapt to our changes. Could it be something in our brains that's considered unnatural that's doing this?