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  1. Mar 15, 2021 · A first, thin, contrastive use of the expression “human nature” is provided by the application of a thin, generic concept of nature to humans. In this minimal variant, nature is understood in purely contrastive or negative terms.

    • Naturalism: Moral

      Whereas Thomson, as a neo-Aristotelian, defines what is good...

    • Aquinas, Thomas

      If a dualist is someone who thinks that human beings consist...

    • Ethics: Virtue

      A misunderstanding of eudaimonia as an unmoralized concept...

  2. correct definition of human nature?a parsimonious de-finition that generates logically consistent, empirically accurate predictions about collective behavior. The definition that emerged at the end of the eight-eenth century with Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments included Hobbes's egotistical, hedonistic, power-focused definition.

  3. The concept of human nature refers to the notion that there are aspects of how the human mind works and of human behavior that are common to all (or most) members of our species.

  4. Jan 18, 2024 · Traditionally, the concept of human nature is taken to refer to a proper subset of human traits or conduct deemed characteristically human. What fits this bill? On its standard reading, defining properties must satisfy three conditions.

  5. Feb 2, 2011 · In everyday speech, the phrase ‘human nature’ denotes something that all human beings share. The search for human nature has traditionally been the search for human universals. But this is only the simplest sense in which a species can have a shared, biological nature.

    • Stefan Linquist, Edouard Machery, Paul E. Griffiths, Karola Stotz
    • 10.1098/rstb.2010.0224
    • 2011
    • 2011/02/02
  6. Jan 1, 2017 · Abstract. This sketch of an account of human nature begins with the claim that we should see humans as a kind of process, a life cycle, rather than as a kind of substance or thing.

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  8. Feb 4, 2012 · Like Hull’s own tentative account of what human nature might be, Machery’s proposal is merely statistical: human nature consists in nothing more than a set of traits that are widely distributed within the human species, and which owe that distribution to any of a variety of evolutionary processes.

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