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Summary SLK 220- Chapter 2 Culture and nature notes

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This is an in-depth summary of Chapter 2 in the Social psychology textbook, of all the necessary information from the test scope provided by the Psychology department at the university of Pretoria.











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Uploaded on
February 16, 2025
Number of pages
23
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Summary

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CHAPTER 2
Learning objectives:

1. Explain how and why the human brain evolved the way it did.
2. Understand how culture and nature work together to affect
choices and behaviour and make culture a better way of being
social.
3. Summarise how the two systems of the mind differ and work
together.
4. Describe how inner processes serve interpersonal function

 Nurture: Regarded as the guiding principles that guide the way an individual
lives their life.
o An individual’s nurturing is based on many factors, including religion, culture,
geographic location, race, gender and family upbringing, parenting styles,
sibling interaction and schooling.
 The way we are nurtured is even more influential than the individual’s innate
nature, although this has been widely debated and contested.


NATURE, NURTURE AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR

EXPLAINING THE PSYCHE

 Psyche: A broad term for mind, including emotions, desires, perceptions and
indeed all psychological processes.
 Why are people the way they are? Why is the human mind set up as it is? Why
do people think, want, feel and act in certain ways?
o The answers lie in nature and culture.
 The nature explanations say that people are born a certain way:
 Their genes, hormones, brain structure and other processes dictate
how they will choose and act.
 The cultural explanations focus on what people learn from their
parents, from society and from their own experiences.
 Frans de Waal argued that nature versus culture isn’t a fair fight because without
nature you have nothing.

, o He proposed that the argument should be waged between whether a
particular behaviour is the direct result of nature or comes from a
combination of nature and culture.
o Simply nature comes first, and culture builds on what nature has provided.
 Nature has prepared human beings specifically for culture.
 The characteristics that set humans apart from other animals include language,
a flexible self that can hold multiple roles, and an advanced ability to understand
each other’s mental states.
o These characteristics are mainly there to enable people to create and sustain
culture.


NATURE DEFINED

 Nature: The physical world around us, including its laws and processes.
o It includes the entire world that would be there even if no human beings
existed.
 Those who explain human behaviour using nature invoke the sorts of processes
that natural sciences have shown.
o Eg. Neuroscientists look for explanations in terms of what happens inside the
brain (chemical reactions, electrical activity).
 Behaviour geneticists seek to understand behaviour as the result of genes
and show that people are born with tendencies to feel and act in certain ways.
 Advocates of nature in psychology turn to evolutionary theory to understand
behaviour patterns.

, EVOLUTION, AND DOING WHAT’S NATURAL

 The theory of evolution was proposed by the British biologist Charles Darwin in
the 1800s.
o It focuses on how change occurs in nature.
 Humans are animals and engage in the basic needs and wants of another
animal.
 An important feature of most living things is the drive to prolong life.
o There are 2 ways of doing this
1. Go on living.
 Beliefs that death is not the end but merely a transition into a
different kind of life have been found all over the world.
2. Reproduction.
 Reproduction is the only possible strategy to enable any form of life
to continue into the future.
 Change is another common trait of living things.
o Nature produces changes that are essentially random.
o Some random changes will disappear, whereas others will endure.
 The process of natural selection decides which traits will disappear
and which will continue.
 Natural selection has 2 criteria:
1. Survival.
2. Reproduction.
 A trait that improves survival or reproduction will tend to last for many
generations and become more common.
o An unusual trait that makes someone happier or gives the person higher self-
esteem or fosters a weird sense of humour will not necessarily be passed on
to future generations, unless those changes can translate into better survival
or better reproduction.
 Survival: Living longer.
 Herbert Spencer’s survival of the fittest describes natural selection.
o Animals compete against each other to survive, as in who can get the best
food or who can best escape being eaten by larger animal
 Survival depends in part on the circumstances in your environment.

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