OPE-L
mailing list archive

Other Periods  | Other mailing lists  | Search  ]

Date:  [ Previous  | Next  ]      Thread:  [ Previous  | Next  ]      Index:  [ Author  | Date  | Thread  ]

IMPORTANT: If you cite this message, OPE-L policy requires you not to reveal the identity of the author.

Re: [OPE-L] status equality



You may cite this message only if you do not disclose who wrote it.


At 9:20 AM -0800 2/18/05, Ian Wright wrote:
Hi Rakesh

 Too innatist for me, I think. This fungibility and universality may
 be a historico social result, not a given of human nature. In some
 sense the potential for such pre-existed its actualization, but in
 what sense?  What are the necessary and sufficient conditions for the
 actualization of these causal powers.

If we took an infant from 17th century fedual France and deposited it with a family in northern California in 2005, would that infant be able to become an electrician, a nurse, a software engineer; or would it only be able to develop the skills necessary for peasant farming? Of course we can't perform this experiment, but I'd hazard a guess to the outcome!


But what about an adult? I am wondering whether the kind of
fungibility that a dynamic capitalist economy demands can be taken as
given in human nature. For example, at the social level, fungibility
will be greater to the extent that language is uniform. But there may
also be questions at the ontogenetic level and early childhood
development? I simply do not know.


We know there is something quite complex that is innate and invariant (so far) over historical time periods, which is the genetic basic of humanity. It's an enormous amount of information and wisdom zipped up in our genes that enables and constrains our social development.


Wisdom in our genes? To me that is a peculiar expression


 This
genetic basis enables the development of highly adaptable animals that
may be socialised into an existing body of theory and practice.

Again perhaps necessary but not sufficient condition for high adaptability.



 Our
mental machinery or hardware must be such as to support the ability to
run all different kinds of knowledge software, from theories about how
to wire up buildings, to theories about the economy and the society
etc.

There's a lot of work been done on the kinds of mental machinery that
separate us from the animals.

But that's not all that separates us. It may be necessary but not sufficient; the divide is a historical product. I am interested in historical accounts of perception, cognition, powers. Isn't this what Marx called for in his third Paris Manuscript?

Rakesh



 But I'm afraid I haven't read any of the
authors you mention on historical materialist views of human nature.

There will be a point soon when we will begin to reprogram our genetic
basis. That will raise very interesting questions about what human
nature really is ...

I think now that I have not answered your concerns, or not addressed
them. What's wrong with innatism, anyhow? Some form of it cannot be
denied.

ATB,
-Ian.



Other Periods  | Other mailing lists  | Search  ]