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Topic 1.5Philosophy HL43 flashcards

Human nature

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1.5.1
Question

What does 'human nature' mean?

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1.5.111 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What does 'human nature' mean?

Answer

The traits shared by all humans simply for being human — the same in everyone, before culture shapes you.

Card 2concept
Question

Aristotle's function argument?

Answer

Everything has a special activity; ours is reasoning; so our nature is to be rational animals and the good life reasons well.

Card 3definition
Question

What is a thing's 'function' (Aristotle)?

Answer

The activity it's meant to do, and do well — an eye to see, a knife to cut, a human to reason.

Card 4example
Question

Main objection to the function argument?

Answer

It assumes nature gives us a 'purpose', but unlike a made knife, nobody obviously built humans for a job.

Card 5concept
Question

One reason to believe in a shared nature?

Answer

Some reactions — fear, laughter, needing others — turn up in every human culture.

Card 6concept
Question

One reason to doubt a fixed nature?

Answer

Humans differ hugely across cultures and history, so little may be truly the same in everyone.

Card 7concept
Question

The two questions inside 'human nature'?

Answer

Is there a fixed nature at all? And if so, what is it like?

Card 8definition
Question

What does 'the rational animal' mean?

Answer

Aristotle's label for humans: animals, but the ones whose special activity is reasoning.

Card 9example
Question

Main objection to Mencius?

Answer

If we're born good, why is cruelty so common? (He replies: the sprouts wither without care.)

Card 10concept
Question

Nature vs nurture in the debate?

Answer

We have inborn traits AND are shaped by upbringing — so the real question is how much is fixed.

Card 11process
Question

How do you reach the top band in Section A?

Answer

Weigh competing views using all the evidence and reach a reasoned conclusion — don't just describe.

1.5.28 cards

Card 12definition
Question

Nature vs nurture — the debate?

Answer

Are we born a certain way (nature), or made by our environment and experience (nurture)?

Card 13concept
Question

Locke's tabula rasa?

Answer

The newborn mind is a blank slate; everything we know is written on it by experience — pure nurture.

Card 14concept
Question

Skinner's behaviourism?

Answer

Behaviour is shaped by conditioning: reward a behaviour and it grows, punish it and it fades.

Card 15definition
Question

What is 'conditioning'?

Answer

Learning to repeat what's rewarded and avoid what's punished.

Card 16example
Question

Strongest evidence for nature?

Answer

Identical twins raised apart still end up strikingly alike, which suggests a lot is born in us.

Card 17concept
Question

Strongest point for nurture?

Answer

Upbringing clearly shapes us, and rewards/punishments really do change behaviour (Locke, Skinner).

Card 18concept
Question

The modern 'interaction' answer?

Answer

Genes and environment combine: a gene can switch on in certain settings, and inborn traits shape how we're treated.

Card 19process
Question

Why avoid 'all nature' or 'all nurture'?

Answer

The evidence cuts both ways, so the real question is how much each matters and how they combine.

1.5.38 cards

Card 20definition
Question

Emotion vs reason — the debate?

Answer

Are humans basically rational or basically emotional — is the head or the heart really in charge?

Card 21concept
Question

Descartes on emotion and reason?

Answer

The passions mislead, so reason should rule and keep them in check.

Card 22definition
Question

What did Descartes call the emotions?

Answer

The 'passions' — strong feelings that are useful signals but unreliable rulers.

Card 23concept
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Hume: 'reason is the slave of the passions'?

Answer

Reason alone never moves us; only feeling makes things matter, so reason serves our feelings.

Card 24example
Question

One weakness of 'reason should rule'?

Answer

With no feeling at all, nothing would matter — even caring about truth is itself a feeling.

Card 25example
Question

One weakness of 'feeling drives us'?

Answer

If feeling rules, it's hard to criticise cruel desires — and reason can reshape feelings, not just serve them.

Card 26concept
Question

The partnership answer?

Answer

Feeling supplies what we care about; reason works out how to get it and can correct feelings built on false beliefs.

Card 27comparison
Question

Descartes vs Hume in one line?

Answer

Descartes: reason should rule feeling. Hume: feeling rules, and reason is its servant.

1.5.48 cards

Card 28definition
Question

What is a human universal?

Answer

A feature found in every known human culture — like language, family, morality or ritual.

Card 29definition
Question

What is cultural relativism?

Answer

The view that beliefs and values are only 'true' relative to a culture, so nothing is fixed across all people.

Card 30example
Question

Examples of human universals?

Answer

Language, some form of family, music, telling right from wrong, fear of death, laughter, birth/death rituals.

Card 31concept
Question

Why do universals suggest a shared nature?

Answer

A feature appearing in every culture despite huge differences is probably built into us.

Card 32concept
Question

The 'outline vs content' move?

Answer

The outlines are universal (every culture has language, family, morality); the content (which language, which rules) is local.

Card 33example
Question

Objection to universals?

Answer

Each 'universal' looks very different up close — maybe they only seem alike from far away.

Card 34concept
Question

The danger of full relativism?

Answer

If all values are only relative, you can't condemn any cruelty as genuinely wrong.

Card 35comparison
Question

Universals vs variation — the balance?

Answer

The shared outlines point to a real human nature; the varying content shows it's a thin frame, not a fixed rulebook.

1.5.58 cards

Card 36comparison
Question

Blank slate vs fixed nature?

Answer

Blank slate (Locke): the mind starts empty and experience writes it. Fixed nature (Aristotle): we're born with a set shape.

Card 37concept
Question

Does reason set humans apart?

Answer

Traditionally yes — but animals plan and machines out-calculate us, so maybe it's a bundle of traits, not one thing.

Card 38concept
Question

Mencius on human nature?

Answer

Basically good: we're born with moral 'sprouts' like compassion (the child at the well) that society should grow.

Card 39concept
Question

Xunzi on human nature?

Answer

Basically bad: crude and self-seeking; goodness is trained in, like straightening warped wood.

Card 40comparison
Question

Mencius vs Xunzi in one line?

Answer

Mencius: born good. Xunzi: born bad and needs cultivation. Both agree there IS a fixed nature.

Card 41process
Question

The synthesis of the topic?

Answer

Both extremes fail: we're born with tendencies, and nurture largely decides which of them grow.

Card 42definition
Question

What does Paper 1 Section A ask?

Answer

Use a stimulus + your own knowledge to explore a philosophical issue about being human [25].

Card 43process
Question

What lifts a Section A answer to the top band?

Answer

Exploring and weighing several views on the stimulus and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing.

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