Beyond Human Nature: How Culture and Experience Shape Our Lives

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Description

We are constantly told that human traits – from aggression to gender differences – are ‘hardwired’. In Beyond Human Nature Jesse J. Prinz reveals that it is the societies we live in, not our genes, that determine how we think and feel. From why mental illness differs so widely between cultures to how geography influences morals, from our sexual preferences to how we learn languages, he proves that the vast diversity of behaviour is not ingrained. This is a book about humanity’s power to transcend nature; and one that, ultimately, celebrates our differences.Jesse J. Prinz is currently a Distinguished Professor of philosophy at the City University of New York and an Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he taught until January 2009. He works primarily in the philosophy of psychology and has produced books and articles on emotion, moral psychology, aesthetics and consciousness. ‘From start to finish this book is a fine, balanced, enormously learned and informative blast on the trumpet of common sense and humane understanding … wonderful’ Simon Blackburn, New Statesman’The nature versus nurture tussle has been running for centuries, and into this fervid arena steps Jesse J. Prinz … he explores the origins of knowledge, language, thought and emotion and argues that there is not one human nature, but many’ Carl Wilkinson, Financial Times ‘Jesse Prinz wants to call a halt to the “century of the gene” … in a backlash against the tyranny of DNA’ Sydney Morning Herald

Additional information

Weight 0.303 kg
Dimensions 2.3 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

416

Publisher

Year Published

2013-1-31

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

0141019344

About The Author

Jesse J. Prinz is currently a Distinguished Professor of philosophy at the City University of New York and an Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he taught until January 2009. He works primarily in the philosophy of psychology and has produced books and articles on emotion, moral psychology, aesthetics and consciousness.

Compelling … urgent and persuasive … This bracing book leads the charge against the idea that genetics explains all

Other text

A fine, balanced, enormously learned and informative blast on the trumpet of common sense and humane understanding.

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