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  2. Nature versus nurture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature_versus_nurture

    Nature versus nurture is a long-standing debate in biology and society about the relative influence on human beings of their genetic inheritance (nature) and the environmental conditions of their development (nurture). The alliterative expression "nature and nurture" in English has been in use since at least the Elizabethan period [1] and goes ...

  3. Innateness hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innateness_hypothesis

    Linguistic nativism is the hypothesis that humans are born with some knowledge of language. It is intended as an explanation for the fact that children are reliably able to accurately acquire enormously complex linguistic structures within a short period of time. [3] The central argument in favour of nativism is the poverty of the stimulus.

  4. Francis Galton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Galton

    Author abbrev. (zoology) F. Galton, Galton. Sir Francis Galton FRS FRAI (/ ˈɡɔːltən /; 16 February 1822 – 17 January 1911) was a British polymath and the originator of eugenics during the Victorian era; his ideas later became the basis of behavioral genetics. [1][2] Galton produced over 340 papers and books.

  5. Human nature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_nature

    As with the nature versus nurture debate, which is concerned whether – or to which degrees – human behavior is determined by the environment or by a person's genes, scientific research is inconclusive about the degree to which human nature is shaped by and manageable by systemic structures as well as about how and to which degrees these ...

  6. Behavioural genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioural_genetics

    e. Behavioural genetics, also referred to as behaviour genetics, is a field of scientific research that uses genetic methods to investigate the nature and origins of individual differences in behaviour. While the name "behavioural genetics" connotes a focus on genetic influences, the field broadly investigates the extent to which genetic and ...

  7. Nurture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nurture

    Nurture. Nurture is usually defined as the process of caring for an organism as it grows, usually a human. [1][2] It is often used in debates as the opposite of "nature", [a] whereby nurture means the process of replicating learned cultural information from one mind to another, and nature means the replication of genetic non-learned behavior.

  8. Developmental psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Developmental_psychology

    Developmental psychology is the scientific study of how and why humans grow, change, and adapt across the course of their lives. Originally concerned with infants and children, the field has expanded to include adolescence, adult development, aging, and the entire lifespan. [1] Developmental psychologists aim to explain how thinking, feeling ...

  9. The Nurture Assumption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nurture_Assumption

    The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do is a 1998 book by the psychologist Judith Rich Harris. Originally published 1998 by the Free Press, which published a revised edition in 2009. [1] The book was a 1999 Pulitzer Prize finalist (general non-fiction). The use of "nurture" as a synonym for "environment" is based on the ...