Human Nature
By Eleanor Finley, originally published by Uneven Earth
June 11, 2020
What is human nature? How can we make sense of human beings as creatures which are part of the natural world? What makes our species distinct from others? People have been asking ourselves these kinds of questions for millennia. Aristotle, the classic Greek philosopher and harbinger of modern biology, famously characterized human beings as zoon politikon, a political animal that can deliberate collectively upon what should be in the world. Since the Industrial Revolution, it has become popular to define human beings in economic terms. So-called man the toolmaker alters his physical environment to suit his purposes. Yet, as we shall see, Aristotles ancient idea still resonates with much of what the science says about the human species today.
Anthropologists are scientists who study the human species from a holistic perspective, taking into account our biology, language, material culture (archaeology), social systems, and everyday life. Over the course of a century, anthropologists have amassed first-hand accounts of human societies from all over the world. We call this ethnographic record. The ethnographic record shows that within broad realms of universals like family and friendship, spirituality or religion, play and sports, politics, and production, the range of possibilities are endless. For this reason, anthropologists have long ceased trying to define human nature and instead focus on exploring the human potential. In other words, there is no single human nature or blueprint for organizing human life.
The idea of human nature nonetheless remains deeply lodged in our popular imagination about good and evil. Most often, people invoke the notion to justify an evil act or system of injustice. It is supposedly human nature to be greedy, for instance, or to exploit others. Although on the surface these expressions appear politically neutral, they are tautologies: explanations that merely repeat themselves. Why did men rape women, children, and other men? Why, because it was supposedly in their male nature to do so! Yet hardly explains why some men choose to rape and others dont. It is equally in mens capacity not to rape, so why bother blaming nature at all? Below the surface, statements about what is natural are really expressions about what we see as morally permissible. We invoke human nature as if to say, These things will never change so dont even try.
The debate about human nature is really a veiled way of talking about good and evil. To question the good of humankind is to question whether it is ethical to respect others. If we decide humans are bad, then we dont feel bad treating them badly.
More:
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-06-11/human-nature/