Human Nature - Human Instincts.

In summary, the discussion was about if human nature can be accepted as controlling sexual instincts. They concluded that yes, humans do have instincts. The main difference between instincts and impulses is that impulses do not have to be acted upon. For instance, a house cat may not pursue a mouse if it's well fed, but will always run off when it's hungry.
  • #1
Peon666
108
0
What is human nature and what is known by human instincts? What's the difference between the two? Is there any distinct line differentiating the two?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Funny, years ago we had a very smiliar discussion in the forum. The board was completely different then. I think sometime around 2004?

The main idea of the discussion was if human can be accepted as controlling sexual instict? Or what human feels sexually can be called as an instinct?

Personally I think, just because we have cultural regulations or some means of birth control, it doesn't mean we can control it. It's uncontrollable, so it's an instinct. Like violance. So, humans do have instincts. So, we are animals. And being an animal, despite of being intelligent, our nature has common parts with animal nature. We created some sort of an environment designed to reduce that animal nature; its reactions and reflexes. But it's only a matter of change in environment for human to get back on those instincts. So I guess, all of this is human nature?
 
  • #3
I don't agree that violence is an instinct; I think, rather, that it is learned.

As for sexual urges, we can't control them.

As for our thoughts, we can't control them; at least, like most control, not with attempted force.

Despite all that, we appear to be able to choose our actions to a remarkable degree amid all these strong urges.
 
  • #4
No no no no no. What you have to understand is the difference between INSTINCTS and IMPULSES. Animals have instincts. Bees dancing, dogs fighting, whatever, are uncontrollable automatic responses. Human sexual urges are IMPULSES as are impulses like hunger, fear, etc. The difference is that urges do NOT have to be acted upon. The URGE you feel is a biological REFLEX that you can cognitively choose whether or not to act upon. Dogs can't. They can be conditioned to learned responses but they cannot actively CHOOSE whether or not, at any given time, whether or not they WANT (because animals do not have wants, they have needs) to act. Our cognitive self awareness and ability to actively choose our behavior and understanding is what makes us far different from animals.
 
  • #5
NeHumanasCred, that's an interesting way of looking at it. I would agree with you for the most part. However, I'm sure animals, like humans have conflicting impulses. What about a mother cat who feels the impulse to eat herself, but gives her food to her kittens? I've seen cats close to starving do that.

I've also seen cats, especially older cats, look interestedly at mice but then decide not to pursue them. That to me is a conscious decision not to act on an impulse.

Of all the animals I would agree that humans have the most innate ability to ignore impulses based on abstract reasoning. However, it would be difficult to conclude that no other animal can do it at least to a small extent.

The entire subject is somewhat philosophical, as in not provable one way or another. What's free will/self determination? Do we ultimately have it? People have been asking these questions for ages.
 
  • #6
What's you're observing are instincts and conditioned responses. Cats have the preservation of their young built into their anatomy. Have you ever seen an animal (without nervous system damage) engage "child abuse"? The answer to that is no because animals don't have emotion (I know people are going to argue with this one for ages, but the scientific research has yet to show that lower creatures can perceive emotion). As for the older cats looking at mice and choosing not to pursue them, that is a conditioned response based of Skinner's system of positive and negative reinforcement. A trained house cat may not pursue a mouse because it's well fed and does not find a positive consequence from chasing, catching, and eating said mouse. There are very few animals in the world that will hunt when they're not hungry. A STARVED cat however, no matter how old/trained it is, will ALWAYS run off it's survival instinct and chase said mouse. That's the difference between animals and people. Starving animals will not and cannot ignore, for instance, their hunger instinct which is what defines it as an instinct. Humans are the only creatures alive that can be 100% neurologically healthy and literally starve themselves to death in the presence of food. The only other thing I want to point out is that instincts and impulses are different from physiological responses. That said, instincts and impulses are the BEHAVIORAL reactions organisms make in response to physiological and environmental stimuli. Your "feeling" of hunger is a uncontrollable biological response that is in every way the same as any other mammals biological response to hunger. An animal will instinctually hunt for food in response to this hunger while a human will make the conscious and IMPULSIVE choice to appease their hunger. If you have any other questions or input feel free to say it. <3
 
  • #7
Leaving aside instinct, Strong Reciprocity is the best model of human nature in regards to political philosophy:


(this is an excerpt from The Origin of Wealth by Eric D. Beinhocker,
Human Nature and Strong Reciprocity

If one digs deeply into the Left-Right divide, down to its philosophical and historical core, one finds two conflicting views of human nature. On the Left is the view that human beings are inherently altruistic; that greed and selfishness stem not from human nature, but from the construction of the social order; and that humans can be made better through a more just society. The lineage of this view descends from Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Karl Marx. On the Right is the view that human beings are inherently self-regarding and that the pursuit of self-interest is an inalienable right. The most effective system of government is one that accommodates rather than attempts to change this aspect of human nature. As the eighteenth-century Scottish philosopher David Hume put it, “in contriving any system of government … every man ought to be supposed to be a knave and to have no other end, in all his actions, than his private interests.” The Right claims, however, that if people pursue their self-interest through the mechanisms of markets, then the general interests of Society will be served as well. The lineage of this view descends from Hume, John Locke, and Thomas Hobbes. One might be surprised not to see Adam Smith’s name on this list. But as the economists Herbert Gintis, Samuel Bowles, and Ernst Fehr, and the anthropologist Robert Boyd point out, Smith actually took a more nuanced view. In his Wealth of Nations, Smith indeed showed how self-interest, mediated by markets, can lead to social benefit. But in his other great work, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Smith also said, “How selfish soever man may be supposed, there are evidently some principles in his nature, which interest him in the fortunes of others.” In other words, Smith took a more rounded view of human behavior, one that acknowledged the coexistence of both the self-interested and altruistic sides of human nature. Gintis and his colleagues claim that modern research shows that both the historical Left and Right views of human nature are too simplistic. For centuries, the question of the self-regarding versus the altruistic nature of humankind was a philosophical question and ultimately a matter of opinion. Since the 1980s, however, it has become a scientific question. A substantial body of evidence from controlled experiments, empirical studies, anthropological field work, and the application of game theory has now yielded an answer: Smith was basically right. Human beings are neither inherently altruistic nor selfish; instead they are what researchers call conditional cooperators and altruistic punishers. Giontis and his colleagues refer to this type of behavior as strong reciprocity and define it as “a predisposition to cooperate with others, and to punish (even at personal cost if necessary) those who violate the norms of cooperation, even when it is implausible to expect these costs will be recovered at a later date.” This is the behavior we saw in our earlier discussion of the ultimatum game and the evolving Prisoner’s Dilemma. In essence, people try to follow the Golden Rule, but with a slight twist: do unto others as you would have them do unto you (i.e., conditional cooperation) - but if others don’t do unto you, then nail them, even at personal cost to yourself (i.e., altruistic punishment). People have a highly developed sense of whom they can trust and whom they cannot, to whom they owe favors and who owes favors to them, and whether they are being taken advantage of. As the old adage says, “Fool me once, shame on you: fool me twice, shame on me.” The universality of strong reciprocity behavior is staggering; it has been found in groups of people ranging from modern industrial societies, to remote hunter-gatherer tribes. There is a debate as to how much of this behavior is genetic versus cultural, but there are three pieces of evidence that point strongly to a genetic basis. First is the fact that strong reciprocity shows up in widely varying cultures - no society has been found that does not exhibit some form of it, thus indicating that its origins are not purely cultural. Second is the fact that similar behaviors have been observed in a number of primate species. And third, a biochemical basis for the behavior has been discovered in oxytocin, a brain hormone that plays a critical role in generating feelings of trust and eliciting cooperation in humans. Although strong reciprocity appears to be universal, there is, however, a great diversity of ways in which different societies exhibit and enforce the behavior, thus making it likely that its development has been a case of coevolution between genes and culture. The evolutionary logic for strong reciprocity is simple: in a world of non-zero-sum games, conditional cooperators perform better than agents following either purely selfish or purely altruistic strategies. Even though no single strategy dominated Kristian Lindgren’s evolving Prisoner’s Dilemma model, it is no coincidence that the strategies that rose to the top tended to be variations on the conditional cooperator theme. Likewise, when researchers surveyed results of the ultimatum game played by people around the world, they found that the society that came the closest to behaving according to the self-interested rationality assumed by Traditional Economics was the Machiguenga people of the Peruvian rain forest. The Machiguenga’s cultural norms for strong reciprocity are not as well developed as those of other societies, and as a result, Machiguenga culture is characterized by selfishness, mutual suspicion, and low cooperation. Their society has not advanced beyond family units of organization, and not surprisingly they were among the poorest people of the groups tested. A Traditional economist might argue that strong reciprocity is just another form of self-interest. After all, people cooperate to serve their own ends. Cooperation does indeed pay off in a non-zero-sum world, but there are two crucial distinctions between strong reciprocity and Traditional self-interest. First, Traditional Homo economicus does not care about the process of economic interaction, only whether the outcome maximizes the agent’s self-interest. Experiments show, however, that real people care not only about outcomes, but about whether the process itself was fair. Second, as the ultimatum game shows, people will punish unfair behavior, even at a cost to themselves, and even if they have no hope of recovering that cost in the future. In other words, when people feel as if they’ve really been cheated, they can do some pretty crazy stuff. That is certainly a departure from self-interested rationality. The economic and political ramifications of strong reciprocity may not be immediately obvious, but once we change the core assumptions of human behavior, a lot changes. As an example, consider the issue of public support for the welfare state. In the 1930s through the 1960s,
U.S. government programs to help the less fortunate generally enjoyed widespread popular support. That support dropped dramatically in the 1970s through the 1990s. The reasons for this drop have been the subject of much debate. Those on the Left argue that the lack of support stems from racism, as those receiving benefits are overwhelmingly minorities, and the rise of the selfish “me” generation during this period - in other words, a lack of altruism. The favored explanation of the ?Right is that people finally woke up to the ineffectuality of most welfare programs, thought it was a waste of their taxes, and wanted their money back - in other words, self-interest. Using a combination of surveys, experiments, and focus groups, Christina Fong, Bowles, and Gintis found significant evidence that the swing in attitude was really due to neither of these explanations, but to strong reciprocity in action. When the social programs were instituted, those receiving benefits were viewed primarily as people who wanted jobs but who, because of bad luck and the vagaries of the economy, could not get them. Social norms supported the idea that such people deserve help. In more recent times, however, the popular perception has shifted to the idea that people on benefits are lazy, not interested in work, and abusing the generosity of society. Those behaviors violate reciprocity norms, and are seen as warranting the withdrawal of support and even punishment. The authors suggest that social policies should be designed specifically to “mobilize rather than offend reciprocal values.” For example, policies that are consistent with strong reciprocity include providing skills training for those who want to work, giving incentives for the poor to accumulate savings, supporting entrepreneurial activities in deprived areas, and improving educational opportunities for the disadvantaged. Likewise, strong reciprocity norms encourage people to categorize the disadvantaged into the deserving and undeserving. Programs that reflect this distinction tend to enjoy broad support. For example, (
U.S.) state programs that provide unemployment insurance tend to be popular because workers pay into them while employed, and then if they have bad luck and are laid off, draw on the benefits. Likewise, Social Security has enjoyed over seventy years of popular bipartisan support largely because it is consistent with reciprocity norms - people cannot help getting old, and those who pay into the system benefit from it. On the other hand, programs that run counter to these norms and benefit “undeserving” people tend to be controversial; for example, welfare programs that give benefits with no reciprocal requirements such as work or training, or rehabilitation programs for drug users whose problems are viewed as a consequence of their own actions. But again, if reciprocal action is required (e.g., welfare recipients must work, or drug users must stay clean) then the programs tend to be popularly supported. Strong reciprocity helps explain the attempts by the new Left in the United States and the
United Kingdom to bring personal responsibility back into the progressive agenda.
Clinton’s reform of welfare to include work requirements, and Blair’s campaign to be “tough on crime, and tough on the causes of crime” are prime examples. The Right has also begun to tap into these norms; for example, the faith-based initiatives supported by the Bush administration combine social goals with religiously inspired values of responsibility and reciprocity. Human beings are neither the pure-hearted, altruistic creatures of Rousseau, nor the heartless, selfish creatures of Hume. Smith, the economist and moral philosopher, was ultimately right - humans are both. The Complexity Economics view on strong reciprocity means that the Left can finally turn away from Rousseau’s view that all social ills are society’s fault, and admit a role for personal responsibility. And, likewise, the Right can turn away from Hume’s notion that society must be constructed assuming the worst of human behavior, and admit a role for our more generous instincts.

http://blumensacha.wordpress.com/20...om-the-origin-of-wealth-by-eric-d-beinhocker/
 
  • #8
NeHumanasCred said:
Have you ever seen an animal (without nervous system damage) engage "child abuse"?

Actually yes. There are plenty of animals that attack their own offspring. It's not very common but it happens.

The point is that every conscious animal has to deal with conflicting impulses. We deal with it all the time. I felt like hanging around in bed this morning, but I knew I had to get up and go to work. I'm sure my cat deals with something similar when she's hanging around in the sun, but feels a bit hungry.

BWV, it's interesting that you use the term "best model." How are you evaluating different models? You really need a separate model to evaluate and rank other models.
 
  • #9
JakeA said:
BWV, it's interesting that you use the term "best model." How are you evaluating different models? You really need a separate model to evaluate and rank other models.

Why? its social science not physics
 
  • #10
JakeA said:
Actually yes. There are plenty of animals that attack their own offspring. It's not very common but it happens.

The point is that every conscious animal has to deal with conflicting impulses. We deal with it all the time. I felt like hanging around in bed this morning, but I knew I had to get up and go to work. I'm sure my cat deals with something similar when she's hanging around in the sun, but feels a bit hungry.

You're missing the point entirely. The fact is that, accounting for conditioned responses and learned behavior, instinctive animal behavior is completely predictable because they don't have a conscious choice in their behavior. What I was referring to with "child abuse" was exclusive to newborn defenseless offspring. There is no animal that will attack their offspring for NO particular reason. Human are the only creatures that can and do hurt their children intentionally out of cognitive choice. Find me an example where a neurologically HEALTHY animal goes out of its way to kill its children without being provoked to by some other physiological or environmental stimulus. Filial infanticide is EXTREMELY rare in non-human species and only occurs in response to a stimulus where the death of the offspring would further the well-being of the species.

I know it's hard to accept but animals do not have cognition. There is no plausible research to prove it. We love to impose our humanity on animals and pretend they have love for us, but they're brains just don't work the same way as ours. They CAN'T feel higher emotion.

Finally, I'm not quite sure where you're coming from with the whole "tired/hungry cat" thing as an example of conflicting impulses. If your cat wakes up in the morning and is tired and hungry, if there is food available and she knows it she'll eat it. She doesn't stop to think "What a beautiful morning, I think I'll stare at the trees and ponder their beauty. Oh I'm hungry, but I'd rather sit here a minute than go eat" because animals can't THINK. They're behavior is instantaneous and regulated by their instincts and conditioned responses. I can't stress that anymore. Animals. Can't. Think. Any "emotion" you feel from your pets is imposed and perceived by you because you want it to be true. Chimps, dolphins and a few other species are still part of a hot debate on how close some species are to developing cognition, but your arguing that cats have conscious choice of their actions just proves how little you really know about the neurological and behavioral sciences.

Take ANY University Psychology/Sociology/Behavioral Sciences/Neuroscience class and this is what they'll tell you because it's closest thing we have to scientific truth on the matter.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #11
BWV said:
Leaving aside instinct, Strong Reciprocity is the best model of human nature in regards to political philosophy:


(this is an excerpt from The Origin of Wealth by Eric D. Beinhocker,


http://blumensacha.wordpress.com/20...om-the-origin-of-wealth-by-eric-d-beinhocker/

For a very similar line see Thomas Sowell's 1987 http://books.google.com/books?id=Nw...=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3#PPR9,M1"; he uses 'constrained' (A. Smith, Burke, Hobbes, Federalist authors, Hayek, Justice Holmes, M. Friedman) and 'unconstrained' (William Godwin, Rousseau, Thomas Paine, Marx, H. Laski, Galbraith) views. Beinhocker (2006) seems somewhat derivative of Sowell in the quoted passage.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #12
mheslep said:
For a very similar line see Thomas Sowell's 1987 http://books.google.com/books?id=Nw...=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3#PPR9,M1"; he uses 'constrained' (A. Smith, Burke, Hobbes, Federalist authors, Hayek, Justice Holmes, M. Friedman) and 'unconstrained' (William Godwin, Rousseau, Thomas Paine, Marx, H. Laski, Galbraith) views. Beinhocker (2006) seems somewhat derivative of Sowell in the quoted passage.

Beinhocker is a popular writer summarizing the thinking of a lot of people, so he is by definition derivative. The Smith-Hayek tradition is the common thread there.

For a direct source, Herbert Gintis would be good start
Abstract
Human groups maintain a high level of sociality despite a low level of
relatedness among group members. This paper reviews the evidence for an
empirically identifiable form of prosocial behavior in humans, which we call
‘strong reciprocity,’ that may in part explain human sociality. A strong reciprocator
is predisposed to cooperate with others and punish non-cooperators,
even when this behavior cannot be justified in terms of extended kinship or
reciprocal altruism. We present a simple model, stylized but plausible, of the
evolutionary emergence of strong reciprocity.

http://www.umass.edu/preferen/gintis/strongr.pdf
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #13
NeHumanasCred said:
You're missing the point entirely. The fact is that, accounting for conditioned responses and learned behavior, instinctive animal behavior is completely predictable because they don't have a conscious choice in their behavior. What I was referring to with "child abuse" was exclusive to newborn defenseless offspring. There is no animal that will attack their offspring for NO particular reason. Human are the only creatures that can and do hurt their children intentionally out of cognitive choice. Find me an example where a neurologically HEALTHY animal goes out of its way to kill its children without being provoked to by some other physiological or environmental stimulus. Filial infanticide is EXTREMELY rare in non-human species and only occurs in response to a stimulus where the death of the offspring would further the well-being of the species.

I know it's hard to accept but animals do not have cognition. There is no plausible research to prove it. We love to impose our humanity on animals and pretend they have love for us, but they're brains just don't work the same way as ours. They CAN'T feel higher emotion.

Finally, I'm not quite sure where you're coming from with the whole "tired/hungry cat" thing as an example of conflicting impulses. If your cat wakes up in the morning and is tired and hungry, if there is food available and she knows it she'll eat it. She doesn't stop to think "What a beautiful morning, I think I'll stare at the trees and ponder their beauty. Oh I'm hungry, but I'd rather sit here a minute than go eat" because animals can't THINK. They're behavior is instantaneous and regulated by their instincts and conditioned responses. I can't stress that anymore. Animals. Can't. Think. Any "emotion" you feel from your pets is imposed and perceived by you because you want it to be true. Chimps, dolphins and a few other species are still part of a hot debate on how close some species are to developing cognition, but your arguing that cats have conscious choice of their actions just proves how little you really know about the neurological and behavioral sciences.

Take ANY University Psychology/Sociology/Behavioral Sciences/Neuroscience class and this is what they'll tell you because it's closest thing we have to scientific truth on the matter.

If animals can't think and act on their own, if animals do not have the power of will or of control, if they do not in anyway can change their behavioral instincts then what about the emotions that many animals show towards their masters? I've seen a lot of dogs that die either immediately or within a day or two of their master's death. What about the many cases of a mother animal of one species nurturing a young new born of another species? From where do these emotions or behavior arise from? I'm not getting into an argument. This is something that I just want clarified. Please help. I'm new to this subject in more ways than one.
 
  • #14
Thank you for your contribution Subramanian S, this thread is two years old and thus is too old to revive. Feel free to post any questions you have in the relevant forums.
 

1. What are human instincts?

Human instincts are innate and automatic behaviors that are genetically programmed in humans. They are not learned or acquired through experience, but rather, they are present from birth.

2. What are some common human instincts?

Some common human instincts include the fight or flight response, the desire for food and shelter, and the instinct for self-preservation. Other examples include the instinct to seek companionship, the instinct to protect one's offspring, and the instinct for sexual reproduction.

3. How do human instincts affect behavior?

Human instincts can influence behavior in various ways. For example, the fight or flight response can cause someone to react quickly in dangerous situations, while the instinct for self-preservation can lead to behaviors that prioritize one's own survival. Additionally, instincts can drive certain actions and desires, such as the need for social interaction or the urge to procreate.

4. Can human instincts be overridden?

While human instincts are strong and deeply rooted, they can be overridden or suppressed by learned behaviors, cultural influences, and personal beliefs. For example, someone may have the instinct to fight in a threatening situation, but they may choose to diffuse the situation through communication instead.

5. Are human instincts the same for everyone?

Human instincts are universal, meaning they are present in all human beings. However, the degree to which they are expressed may vary from person to person. Additionally, cultural and societal norms can also shape and influence certain instincts, leading to differences in behavior among individuals and groups.

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
826
Replies
1
Views
919
  • Computing and Technology
Replies
32
Views
861
Replies
12
Views
900
  • General Discussion
Replies
21
Views
1K
  • General Discussion
Replies
6
Views
697
  • General Discussion
Replies
32
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
995
  • General Discussion
Replies
4
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Back
Top