Nature-nurture debate - the argument as to whether a person’s development came from their genes or environmental factors
Heredity - Traits being passed from the parent to the offspring
Nature?
This is also called a nativist approach.
The characteristics are innate, which is the result of heredity. This is any characteristic determined by genes.
Examples of nature in genes?
Family, twin and adoption studies show that the closer 2 individuals are , the more likely they are to develop the same characteristics.
Examples of influence of nature in research ( genes )
OCD: Nestadt et al
First degree relatives of OCD sufferers had a 5x greater risk of developing OCD compared to the control group.
Aggression: O’ Connor:
He found a concordance rate of 72% for both MZ twins and 42% for DZ twins reared together. It was also 64% and 34% for reared apart.
This suggests the role of genes as MZ concordance rate was much higher.
Examples of nature in evolution?
Relationships:
Intersexual selection argues that human mate choices have evolved to increase reproductive success. Females prefer males with resources to provide but males look for indicators of fertility
Aggression:
Sexual jealousy explains to prevent cuckoldry and to stop females from straying, their partner will attempt to avoid infidelity, which acts as a cue for sexual jealousy
Attachment: Bowlby’s evolutionary argues that attachment evolved to increase survival in the short term for food and protection and in the long term to provide a IWM
What is nurture?
This is also called an empiricist approach.
People believe that characteristics are the result of the environment.
People are blank slates and all characteristics are due to their environment.
Examples of influence of nurture? (phobias and aggression)
Phobias: Everything can be explained through experience alone. The two-step process model shows this. Classical conditioning and operant conditioning can be seen in Little Albert.
Aggression: Bandura argues that aggression is learnt through modelling, which is imitating the behaviour of a person someone has seen. This is supported by bobo doll studies.
When the children watched an aggressive model, they repeated the aggression only if they saw it happen compared to 2 others who did not.
Example of influence of nurture (attachment?)
Attachment: Behaviourism argues that attachment is learnt through classical and operant conditioning.
The person providing the food becomes associated with pleasure and becomes a conditioned stimulus.
After feeding, the hunger drive is reduced and it is rewarding.
Since the mother provides the food, she becomes a secondary reinforcer and the infant strives to be close to her and become attached.
Interactionist approach?
Nature and nurture should be working together rather than separately.
For example, a child’s temperament will influence how its parents respond to it.
So their attachment type will be determined by an interaction between nature and nurture.
In institutions, someone that may cause violence in prison may not necessarily do it just because of the depriving resources but also due to their personality as a violent person.
No seperation negative evaluation (part 1)?
A problem with the debate is you can't separate nature and nurture.
They are intertwined with each other so it makes no sense to separate them
This is where the idea of interactionism comes from, the diathesis stress model is an example of the interactionist approach.
No separation negative evaluation? (part 2 - further information)
It is used for explaining mental disorders such as OCD.
Genetics can create vulnerability but other factors (stressors) affect whether a condition develops or not and which disorder it is.
Supporting this approach is evidence from Cromer et al where over half of all patients have suffered a traumatic event.
It is best to consider interactionism when conducting research.
A problem with research investigating the comparative effects of nature and nurture are twin studies.
It is based that MZ twins have 100% of the same genes and DZ have 50% of the same genes with the same environmental influences.
However, MZ twins may have more similar environments than DZ twins as they look identical, they are treated more similarly.
Therefore, a similar environment may be the reason that MZ twins concordance rates are higher than genes being the cause.
This means twin studies are not valid for the debate.
Biological determinism evaluation base point?
The extreme nature stance is an example of hard biological determinism.
It has led to controversy as it argues that our inherited genetic make-up determines genes and behaviour with no environmental input. In the case of African-Americans in American IQ tests, Americans came first, European immigrants and then African-Americans afterwards.
This later enforced negative racial stereotypes that Americans were genetically superior in terms of intelligence.
This research was used to justify new ways of social control. Between 1907 and 1963, 64,000 women were forced to be sterilised under eugenics legislation in the USA.
Out of these 64,000, the US Senate committee revealed that at least 2000 women were sterilized without knowing or without consent.
This shows that findings only came due to the results of culturally biased IQ tests which favoured White Americans and that IQ is affected by the environment, not only genetics.
Ethical implications of biological determinism?
Psychologists taking an extreme nurture stance showed hard environmental determinism.
Behaviour can be changed by altering environmental conditions.
This has been applied positively in therapy where desirable behaviours are reinforced and undesirable behaviours are ignored like token economies.
However, in extreme terms, there are many ethical implications with this technique restricting human rights.
It leads to manipulation and control of society using these techniques. Both an extreme nat/nurt stance can present ethical implications