temperaments are a person's characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity. Temperament has been proven to be effected by nature and nurture. Nature is what will be the biggest influence on temperament, and your nature temperament will stay with you the rest of your life (your temperament does not change). The nurture of family has more of an effect on bigger more important issues like politics and religion, while peer nurture has a larger effect on the day to day opinions on things such as what movie to watch, what clothes to wear etc. I hope I have answered your question, if not, try re-wording it.
AnswerNurture is the effect the people in your life had on you growing up. An example would be the values your parents taught you. Nature is the genetics you received, like eye color.
If the theory supports the nature side of the debate then it ignores environmental influences, whereas it it supports the nurture side it takes into account all environmental factors - such as surroundings, upbringing, authority etc
The nature vs. nurture debate has a long history, with roots tracing back to ancient Greek philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle. However, the modern understanding of this debate emerged during the 19th century, with the work of psychologists like John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The debate continues to be a prominent topic in various fields, including psychology, sociology, and biology.
visious i think tats how you spell it
Not quite sure where this question is headed, the German letter w is pronounced like the English v, so words starting with w in German are pronounced with a v-sound.The German v sounds like the English f.The English w-sound does not exist in German.
Nature v/s Nurture....This is a long discussion about what defines a human being: How much of what you are is determined by your genes (nature), and how much is determined by the environment in which you grow (nurture)?In other words "innate qualities" v/s "personal experience".Nowadays almost everyone agrees that it has to be a mixture of both. But where one ends and the other starts is still discussion material.Example question: Is criminal behaviour a result of nature or nurture?
AnswerNurture is the effect the people in your life had on you growing up. An example would be the values your parents taught you. Nature is the genetics you received, like eye color.
Generally there is a debate about nature v nurture. Some serious problems (behavioral ect) can be caused by genetics (check the separate breed characterisitcs) and then you influence their personalities and it's like a human, we are all different but our genetics and environment do affect this.
If the theory supports the nature side of the debate then it ignores environmental influences, whereas it it supports the nurture side it takes into account all environmental factors - such as surroundings, upbringing, authority etc
Twin studies tell us about nature, as they are very close biologically (identical twins). Adoption studies tell us about the effects of different upbringings on twins (some of which might be the same biologically[identical]).
The nature vs. nurture debate has a long history, with roots tracing back to ancient Greek philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle. However, the modern understanding of this debate emerged during the 19th century, with the work of psychologists like John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The debate continues to be a prominent topic in various fields, including psychology, sociology, and biology.
It is one factor that influences an outcome. It may not be the direct cause, but it has some bearing on who an individual is and what that individual does. It's kind of like the nature part of the nature v. nurture debate. It can be something such as personality, temperament, genetics, etc.Individual factors are things such as genetics and personality that influence the outcome.
Human Nature - 2004 V is rated/received certificates of: USA:R
The Artist in Nature - 2002 V is rated/received certificates of: USA:G
V. Ronchi has written: 'The nature of lights'
V. Stanek has written: 'World of nature'
H. V. Morris has written: 'Planning a nature trail' -- subject(s): Nature trails