Alchemyst wrote:ForgedinHell wrote:Kayla wrote:
the funny thing about human nature is that there are so many different concepts of it and so many incompatible things are justified in terms of human nature
so perhaps someone who rejects the idea that human nature is something very specific is on to something
No. Human nature is very real, and it is based on evolution. What people fail to understand is that there were two different evolutionary selection pressures that pulled human "morality" into two different directions. One is individual selection, the other is group selection. But, just to give a basic illustration, the vast majority of parents, world-wide, treat their children better than strangers. That's a prime example of individual selection. The parent has half their nuclear DNA in their child, absent incest. That closer genetic relationship brings about natural tendency to favor one's children over strangers.
Another example is we evolved to think in terms of "group identity" and "us versus them" mentality. Just cruise around this site and see how often the Europeans insult Americans? That's an example of our human nature at work. Our morality is based on our group, and we do not extend morality to those outside our group. Suppose Trump said he wanted to see no one go hungry and donated 10 million in food for starving children in the US? He would be considered a hero. However, if he sent that same ten million, to people who were equally hungry, but they were the Taliban, what would happen? He would be demonized. The same act of charity, yet, the in-group out-group mentality takes over and makes the same act either moral or an abomination. That's human nature.
I take your general point about group identity, but there is a personality trait called conscientiousness and I would bet that those who score highly on that dimension are indeed disposed to extending morality beyond their group (I do and I do, whilst still favouring my own kind). And isn't anti-American sentiment pretty global? The British don't identitfy much with continental Europe and a majority of us do not want to maintain the current quasi-political union with it. We have a widespread perception of Americans as arrogant, boastful and over-excitable. To be fair, the few Americans I've known have been nice and quiet, so maybe the arrogance thing is a culture within a culture?
Anti-American sentiment is not global, it exists mainly along a small handful of people who don't even know anything about America. Besides, let's say, for the sake of argument, every person outside America hated Americans. So? Would that in any way mean that Americans were worthy of that dislike? Not at all. No more than white supremacists hating blacks makes black people worthy of the hatred. Americans are made up of individual people, and each has their own thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and each is responsible for their own actions. A blanket indictment of all Americans, by its very nature, must be irrational.
If you don't believe in group selection as forming a large part of human nature, then when is the last time you advocated taxing British people to feed starving Africans? For educating them? How come you are more willing to take care of your fellow Brits than people living in America? If you do not identify with groups, then your love for Americans should always have been as strong as your love for your fellow Brits. We constantly think in terms of groups. Sports fans, political parties, race, gender, professions, etc., we constantly are identifying ourselves with groups throughout the day.