Thursday, February 13, 2014
Schooling Systems
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Do We Care About Earth?
Or do we just care about our home? If the human race were to leave the planet for something else, would the majority of us feel a moral obligation to continue helping Earth?
Monday, February 10, 2014
Free Will?
The other day, I started really thinking about
free will and the society mankind has created. A good amount of it relies on
people following the rules that have been set up around society, and when these
rules aren’t followed, it causes discord. Yet, this small percentage of the
population has the ability to make a huge impact on the world. They have the
ability to wage war, or to cover a building in graffiti, or to shoot an
innocent person, or something as seemingly small as steeling poor Billy’s lunch
during school. These acts, whether big or small, lie outside of the “norm”
created by society.
Often, I have found, people make big talk about
wanting to be unique and try different things. Then when the opportunity
presents itself, more often than not, we turn it down. Why is this?
Ironically, my English teacher gave my class an
excerpt from Steven Pinker’s book, Blank
Slate, which deals with the battle over the denial of human nature versus
surrounding culture. Pinker believes that humans grow
into themselves through a combination of culture and biology, a combo which
makes a good amount of sense to me.
On one hand, you can’t completely disregard human
nature and genetic makeup. But at the same time, what element in our genes
stops us from getting up in school and leaving for no reason? Or from pulling
the fire alarm, even when there’s no fire? Perhaps our genetic coding has come
to need some sort of orderly culture. Humans do tend to resist change, and by
creating a society with standard rules, our “human nature” is satisfied in the
process.
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