why is it that children, animals, and the disable know to act differently when a person is sad? can it be said the reason for reasoning could be innnate?
Quite an interesting question steve. to that i would answer that this is nothing innate and that we've just learned this behavior from past experiences. Although I think Kant was getting at something when he said that there are no such things as innate ideas. What he was getting at was that the human being is an extremely malleable creature, and because of that he or she is able to adjust himself or herself to different situations. This is best accomplished by a child, who, after having, if i can say this, no knowledge whatsoever, comes into this world and sees that things as they are. At they at once are forced, in the full extent of its meaning, to adjust to such circumstance and their first reaction to being forced to do so is to cry.
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why is it that children, animals, and the disable know to act differently when a person is sad? can it be said the reason for reasoning could be innnate?
Quite an interesting question steve. to that i would answer that this is nothing innate and that we've just learned this behavior from past experiences.
Although I think Kant was getting at something when he said that there are no such things as innate ideas. What he was getting at was that the human being is an extremely malleable creature, and because of that he or she is able to adjust himself or herself to different situations.
This is best accomplished by a child, who, after having, if i can say this, no knowledge whatsoever, comes into this world and sees that things as they are. At they at once are forced, in the full extent of its meaning, to adjust to such circumstance and their first reaction to being forced to do so is to cry.
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