nature (heredity), and how much is due to nurture, the
infl uences of the physical
and social environment in which a child is raised? Furthermore, what is the interplay
between heredity and environment? These questions have deep philosophical and
historical roots, and they are involved in many topics in psychology.
A psychologist’s take on this issue depends partly on which major perspective
he or she subscribes to. For example, developmental psychologists
whose focus is on
how people grow and change throughout the course of their lives, may be most
interested in learning more about hereditary infl uences if they follow a neuroscience
perspective. In contrast, developmental psychologists
who are proponents of the
behavioral perspective would be more likely to focus on environment (Rutter, 2002,
2006).
However, every psychologist would agree that neither nature nor nurture alone
is the sole determinant of behavior; rather, it is a combination of the two. In a sense,
then, the real controversy involves how much of our behavior is caused by heredity
and how much is caused by environmental infl uences.
A second major question addressed
by psychologists concerns conscious versus
unconscious causes of behavior . How much of our behavior is produced by forces of
which we are fully aware, and how much is due to unconscious activity—mental
processes that are not accessible to the conscious mind? This question represents one
of the great controversies in the fi eld of psychology. For example,
clinical psycholo-
gists adopting a psychodynamic perspective argue that psychological disorders are
brought about by unconscious factors, whereas psychologists employing the cogni-
tive perspective suggest that psychological disorders largely are the result of faulty
thinking processes.
The
next issue is observable behavior versus internal mental processes . Should psy-
chology concentrate solely on behavior that can be seen by outside observers, or
should it focus on unseen thinking processes? Some psychologists, particularly those
relying
on the behavioral perspective, contend that the only legitimate source of
information for psychologists is behavior that can be observed directly. Other psy-
chologists, building on the cognitive perspective, argue that what goes on inside a
person’s mind is critical
to understanding behavior, and so we must concern our-
selves with mental processes.
Free will versus determinism is another key issue. How much of our behavior is
a matter of
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