Nature vs Nuture
-
- Posts: 32
- Joined: 29 Mar 2020, 20:27
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 11
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-funninessishappiness.html
- Latest Review: Project Tau by Jude Austin
Nature vs Nuture
- Brenda Creech
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 3382
- Joined: 09 Mar 2019, 13:34
- Favorite Book: The Reel Sisters
- Currently Reading: Rainbow’s End
- Bookshelf Size: 357
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-brenda-creech.html
- Latest Review: Was She Crying for Me? by Jerry Hyde
Nature vs Nurture has always fascinated me. I like to ponder which is the most dominant in a person and I usually always lean more toward nurture. I am a believer that we are primarily a product of our environment. That being said, I believe we are all born with wants and needs, however, we are mostly taught our needs outweigh our wants. As for Tau, I think he would have continued obeying what he'd been taught instead of wondering about what he wanted because his wants were not acknowledged by the scientists. I think it was nurture that made him the way he is now due to Kalin pursuing the subject with him.funninessishappiness wrote: ↑11 Apr 2020, 22:52 As we all know, Tau was created in a lab. Therefore, before Kalin, everything he knew was from the lab. One of the first things that Kalin asked Tau was "What about what you want to know." This causes Tau to ponder on the meaning of want. Before Kalin ever entered the picture do you think Tau would have eventually figured out what want is? Do you think want is a human emotion that would show itself regardless of the environment? Or do you think want is more of a social phenomenon that only occurs when others show you what you don't have? To put it simply, do you think it was nature or nurture that lead to the way Tau is now?
"Like beauty in the eyes, the divinity of the rose may be in the nose that smells it, and the lover that beholds it." Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
-
- Posts: 32
- Joined: 29 Mar 2020, 20:27
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 11
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-funninessishappiness.html
- Latest Review: Project Tau by Jude Austin
I believe you are right. It was the nurturing touch of Kata that cause Tau to want to escape. I still believe that some part of Tau wasn't completely programmed the way the scientists wanted. I feel like even if we do get to the point where we can clone whole human beings it will be hard to truly make one the exact way we want. Genes change constantly and can sometimes do so of their own volition, regardless of the environment. Even when you are trying to make something that won't have the ability to rebel that doesn't mean that it can't be taught it either. You would have to almost isolate the clone its entire life. If you think about it, the biggest mistakes the scientists did was not separate Kata and Tau. Regardless of clones, human beings are social animals and learn from one another. To put two clones in the same room together should have made the scientists ponder on how that would affect Tau and Kata. If the scientists wanted a "trained" clone then they should have kept him separated from Kata.B Creech wrote: ↑12 Apr 2020, 08:05Nature vs Nurture has always fascinated me. I like to ponder which is the most dominant in a person and I usually always lean more toward nurture. I am a believer that we are primarily a product of our environment. That being said, I believe we are all born with wants and needs, however, we are mostly taught our needs outweigh our wants. As for Tau, I think he would have continued obeying what he'd been taught instead of wondering about what he wanted because his wants were not acknowledged by the scientists. I think it was nurture that made him the way he is now due to Kalin pursuing the subject with him.funninessishappiness wrote: ↑11 Apr 2020, 22:52 As we all know, Tau was created in a lab. Therefore, before Kalin, everything he knew was from the lab. One of the first things that Kalin asked Tau was "What about what you want to know." This causes Tau to ponder on the meaning of want. Before Kalin ever entered the picture do you think Tau would have eventually figured out what want is? Do you think want is a human emotion that would show itself regardless of the environment? Or do you think want is more of a social phenomenon that only occurs when others show you what you don't have? To put it simply, do you think it was nature or nurture that lead to the way Tau is now?
- Brenda Creech
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 3382
- Joined: 09 Mar 2019, 13:34
- Favorite Book: The Reel Sisters
- Currently Reading: Rainbow’s End
- Bookshelf Size: 357
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-brenda-creech.html
- Latest Review: Was She Crying for Me? by Jerry Hyde
I agree they shouldn't have put them in the same room together. They knew Tau was teachable because they had taught him to obey, so why take a chance of an outsider disturbing that? I wondered from the start why they put them together. I was also surprised they didn't have a hidden camera in the room with Tau and Kata so they could monitor their interaction and conversations! I believe everyone is born with distinct personality traits but their environment can affect what they want in some way. What we are taught as we grow and learn will either convince us to do what's right or make us more determined to have our own way. In that respect, nature is stronger than nurture! So who really knows which has the greatest effect on us?funninessishappiness wrote: ↑12 Apr 2020, 21:19I believe you are right. It was the nurturing touch of Kata that cause Tau to want to escape. I still believe that some part of Tau wasn't completely programmed the way the scientists wanted. I feel like even if we do get to the point where we can clone whole human beings it will be hard to truly make one the exact way we want. Genes change constantly and can sometimes do so of their own volition, regardless of the environment. Even when you are trying to make something that won't have the ability to rebel that doesn't mean that it can't be taught it either. You would have to almost isolate the clone its entire life. If you think about it, the biggest mistakes the scientists did was not separate Kata and Tau. Regardless of clones, human beings are social animals and learn from one another. To put two clones in the same room together should have made the scientists ponder on how that would affect Tau and Kata. If the scientists wanted a "trained" clone then they should have kept him separated from Kata.B Creech wrote: ↑12 Apr 2020, 08:05Nature vs Nurture has always fascinated me. I like to ponder which is the most dominant in a person and I usually always lean more toward nurture. I am a believer that we are primarily a product of our environment. That being said, I believe we are all born with wants and needs, however, we are mostly taught our needs outweigh our wants. As for Tau, I think he would have continued obeying what he'd been taught instead of wondering about what he wanted because his wants were not acknowledged by the scientists. I think it was nurture that made him the way he is now due to Kalin pursuing the subject with him.funninessishappiness wrote: ↑11 Apr 2020, 22:52 As we all know, Tau was created in a lab. Therefore, before Kalin, everything he knew was from the lab. One of the first things that Kalin asked Tau was "What about what you want to know." This causes Tau to ponder on the meaning of want. Before Kalin ever entered the picture do you think Tau would have eventually figured out what want is? Do you think want is a human emotion that would show itself regardless of the environment? Or do you think want is more of a social phenomenon that only occurs when others show you what you don't have? To put it simply, do you think it was nature or nurture that lead to the way Tau is now?
"Like beauty in the eyes, the divinity of the rose may be in the nose that smells it, and the lover that beholds it." Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
-
- Posts: 321
- Joined: 23 Jul 2017, 13:30
- Currently Reading: We are Voulhire: A New Arrival under Great Skies
- Bookshelf Size: 26
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-sophiand.html
- Latest Review: Rise of the Savior by Antoine Bonner
-
- Posts: 179
- Joined: 26 Jan 2020, 14:49
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 49
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-jocelyn-eastman.html
- Latest Review: Phoenix by Patricia Simpson
- Nerea
- Posts: 2861
- Joined: 11 May 2018, 05:13
- Favorite Book: Diamond and Pearls
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 735
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-nerea.html
- Latest Review: Little White Lies by JC Anderson
- Reading Device: Laptop
- Signature Addition: No Wahala
I totally agree with you. If Tau didn't meet with Kalin, he would continue subjecting himself to the scientists.B Creech wrote: ↑12 Apr 2020, 08:05Nature vs Nurture has always fascinated me. I like to ponder which is the most dominant in a person and I usually always lean more toward nurture. I am a believer that we are primarily a product of our environment. That being said, I believe we are all born with wants and needs, however, we are mostly taught our needs outweigh our wants. As for Tau, I think he would have continued obeying what he'd been taught instead of wondering about what he wanted because his wants were not acknowledged by the scientists. I think it was nurture that made him the way he is now due to Kalin pursuing the subject with him.funninessishappiness wrote: ↑11 Apr 2020, 22:52 As we all know, Tau was created in a lab. Therefore, before Kalin, everything he knew was from the lab. One of the first things that Kalin asked Tau was "What about what you want to know." This causes Tau to ponder on the meaning of want. Before Kalin ever entered the picture do you think Tau would have eventually figured out what want is? Do you think want is a human emotion that would show itself regardless of the environment? Or do you think want is more of a social phenomenon that only occurs when others show you what you don't have? To put it simply, do you think it was nature or nurture that lead to the way Tau is now?
- raindropreader
- Posts: 55
- Joined: 18 Mar 2020, 14:00
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 0
- DragonLight877
- Posts: 198
- Joined: 12 Jan 2020, 11:58
- Favorite Book: The Slow Regard of Silent Things
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 24
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-dragonlight877.html
- Latest Review: Shepherds of Destiny by Kiel Barnekov
I hadn't thought about this actually. Tau did start asking questions, like all children do. At first I thought it was all nurture. That if Tau was never taught to think for himself, he never would. But there is always that ingrained curiosity in all of us. And that is impossible to snuff out. So I think if they are originally there, I think eventually Tau would have snapped and attacked. It may take many many years, but I think eventually Tau would have had enough.Jocelyn Eastman wrote: ↑13 Apr 2020, 13:05 I think it’s both. I think Tau would naturally want if it wasn’t beaten out of him in the first place. In the book, he questions Dennison but is then punished. I think that was meant to show us that there are human traits in Tau, but they are suppressed. I think those human traits are brought out again with Kata and are refined more with him around.
-
- Posts: 338
- Joined: 20 Apr 2020, 07:15
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 20
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-splendour0606.html
- Latest Review: The Spirituality Puzzle by James Rondinone and Renee Rondinone
-
- Posts: 435
- Joined: 20 Apr 2020, 05:48
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 23
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-ediomis-enwongo01.html
- Latest Review: How To Be Successful by M. Curtis McCoy
-
- Posts: 35
- Joined: 23 Jun 2019, 17:41
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 15
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-marlaszw.html
- Latest Review: Flat Top Mountain Ranch -- the beginning by James E Doucette
- Northernbird84
- Posts: 121
- Joined: 23 Jan 2018, 16:27
- Currently Reading: The Crossing
- Bookshelf Size: 31
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-northernbird84.html
- Latest Review: Fulfillment by ICA
- [MagicDragonInc]
- Posts: 20
- Joined: 03 Feb 2020, 16:53
- Currently Reading: Dagger's Destiny
- Bookshelf Size: 56
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-magicdragoninc.html
- Latest Review: Apollo's Raven by Linnea Tanner
I think this is really interesting point you've made. There was proof that Tau did have wants but was shut down immediately. He probably felt a power dynamic so he couldn't question the scientists and didn't even have the vocabulary to question them. Not to mention I'm sure he was exhausted mentally and physically at the end of every day, like when Kalin was when he arrived. This exhaustion might have prevented him from having the energy to question his own feelings. It took Kalin two years to start cracking (significantly) under the pressure and he had outside experience!Marlaszw wrote: ↑25 Apr 2020, 08:54 I think all humans naturally experience want. Part of what Project Tau lacks is just vocabulary to go with the things he feels. You can see by some of the things that come up, things that happened before Kalin came, that he did have wants. However, before Kalin came, he did not know that what he wanted mattered at all. This is where the nurture of Kalin comes in and it gives Tau the vocabulary to think about what want is, and to explore the ideas that maybe what he wants does matter, contrary to his prior conditioning.
Another thing to take note of was that Dennison (and the other scientists) eventually succeeded in convincing Kalin that he was a project (for at least one year or more), and that his memories were implanted. I think this gets a vote for nurture over nature because his environment changed and he adapted to conform to this new environment. Taking into account evolution and adaptation, maybe Kalin let himself become convinced in order to survive? Agreeing that he is not human might have been the easiest explanation to keep Kalin alive and not face the gravity of the situation?
-
- Posts: 70
- Joined: 11 Apr 2020, 12:02
- Currently Reading:
- Bookshelf Size: 153
- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-victorke.html
- Latest Review: The Hand Bringer by Christopher J. Penington