Chapter 9. (continued)
If
we keep asking why, the answers seem to spread further and further from one another
into a variety of human morés and then cultures; human morés vary widely within
any given society and much more so from society to society. But if we persist
in analyzing masses of the evidence, patterns begin to emerge. Based on these
patterns, we can make some general statements about people and their ways. For
the most part, people act in the ways they do because they have been programmed
to act in those ways by their parents, their teachers, and the communications
media of their cultures. For example, close observation shows that the vast
majority of humans learn to perform the actions that relieve their bodies’ physical
needs in the ways that are considered most socially acceptable in their particular
culture.
Balut is soft-boiled
fetal duck, a dish commonly eaten in Vietnam
In this category, we find the mores that govern how we eat. I far prefer to eat dishes I find familiar from my upbringing. And in my culture, I wash my hands before eating to remove disease-causing germs I might otherwise ingest with my food if I ate it with dirty hands. I’ve never seen these tiny animals, but I’ve been trained to be wary of germs. Therefore, I take measures to neutralize the danger I believe they pose to my well-being. I also make an effort to urinate and defecate only in places deemed acceptable in my society, no matter how urgently "nature calls".
Staphylococcus
bacteria (common on human hands)
It
is important to note the profound way in which human behavior patterns differ
from those of nearly all other animals. A turtle need not ever see another
turtle, from hatching to dying of old age, in order to be turtle-like. Alone, a
turtle would not be able to complete its genetically-driven reproductive
behavior each mating season, but it would at least try to find a mate. The
rest of the time, it would live in ways that are completely normal for turtles,
entirely directed by its body’s genetic code.
Creatures
such as ants, crabs, and fish that came early in evolutionary history clearly
are more fully programmed by their genetic codes than are those of higher orders
such as cats, dogs, apes, and humans. But even most higher-order animals learn
only small portions of their behavioral repertoires. Kittens, in time, will stalk
balls and then mice and birds, even if they are taken from their mothers still
blind and helpless. Puppies are genetically programmed to bury bones. Humans,
by contrast, if raised by dogs, become humanoid dogs, and demonstrate hardly
any human behaviors at all. We humans—unlike turtles, apes, and kittens—learn
how to be human-like by “enculturation,” that is, almost entirely from other,
older humans.1,2
Most
animal behaviors are instinctive, programmed into animals genetically,
especially in the lower-order animals. As we rise up the scale of complexity,
we arrive by degrees at humans, in whom most behaviors are programmed by
nurture—by their upbringings, in other words. A set of behaviors, along with
the body of knowledge that a given community of humans consults in order to
judge when to apply specific behaviors to specific real-life situations, how
to perform the behaviors, and then how to verify that each behavior has been
done appropriately, forms what is called the culture of that human society or tribe. Put a dead fish in the
ground with each corn seed that you plant and wear your tuxedo and black tie to
the opera.
The
first step on our journey to answering the question about humans and their ways
is simply this: human patterns of behavior are mostly the result of programming
by the adults around them in their formative years.
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