Topic > The potential structure of human nature in the life of…

As human beings, we crave knowledge. We desire truth and understanding. There is a need to discover what exactly humans are capable of doing: jumping high, running fast, gaining hidden knowledge, or even sensing potential distinctions within us as individuals and as a race. The ambition to discover the last of these capabilities manifests itself in research completed in the present day as well as in research completed over the past few centuries, starting, in particular, from the time of Charles Darwin. Charles Darwin, the “father of evolution,” inadvertently laid the foundations not only of life and science as we know them today, but also of the concept of human nature and questions relating to its potential structure. After Darwin's discoveries, many other researchers claim the role of genes and heredity in nature. Some researchers affirm this role of genetics in human nature, labeling it as a necessity for the development of a complete understanding, while other researchers completely deny the role of genetics in human nature, claiming that it is an obstacle to scientific and social progress. However, the novel Life of Pi by Yann Martel and the play Copenhagen by Michael Frayn show that human nature can be based not only on genetics but also on external factors. But what are the real differences, if they exist, between the impact of genetics and the impact of culture on human beings? Although contemporary research points to the primary source of human nature only in genetics, the true source of our nature should be attributed to both genetics and culture, which work together to shape human nature in such a complex way that one aspect cannot influence us without the other. .Many researchers divide the basis of human nature... in the middle of the paper... question of the origin of human nature, the answer lies literally within us as well as around us: the evolution of life. Those discoveries made by Darwin, Williams and Mendel did nothing but fire the imagination towards the thousands of hidden answers found in the strange sequence we call life. In the field of science, new theories and changes have never been introduced easily, but the times call for a commitment to discover what truly makes us so uniquely human. Understanding our complex nature will open doors to a whole new field of scientific study and perhaps change everything as we know it. Advances in genetics and behavioral biology may eventually converge, allowing us to see the true correspondence between human nature and its origins. Until these advances become clear, we will all face the same daunting task: discovering the seemingly unobtainable.