The idea that human beings are naturally selfish, greedy or lazy cannot
survive a moment's critical thought

How often do we hear it said "It's only human nature?" And mostly about
some gross piece of behaviour as if it couldn't be avoided? Curiously,
it is not often said about the best things that people can do. On
hearing that someone has risked their life to save another, for some
reason we are not inclined to say "Yes, it's human nature." 

But then, none of these variations of good or bad behaviour are
determined by our "nature." We behave differently in different social
settings and this is evident from everyday experience. So, in
explaining behaviour we must look at the social context in which it
happens.

Mostly, the idea of "human nature " is a reflection of a divisive
society that is incapable of creating a decent life for all its
members. This failure is then rationalised as a pessimistic view that
all people (mainly other people) are inherently selfish, greedy, and
lazy. In its nationalist or racist mode this idea of human nature
attributes various characteristics to whole groups of people. This is
thinking in stereotypes. 

For example, people from Germany are often said to be naturally cruel,
militaristic, humourless and obedient to authority. Some groups or
classes are seen as culturally inferior or of lower intelligence. This
becomes part of ideology used to justify domination and exploitation. 

And all this prejudice, none of which can survive a moment's critical
thought has been used politically to resist progress. It has been used
as an objection to socialism. In this argument all the bad examples of
human behaviour which in the main are generated by capitalism are
called upon to say that a society based on equality and voluntary
co-operation is impossible.

Not genetically programmed

This prejudice is also reinforced by arguments which assert that our
behaviour and our relationships result from the way we are biologically
or genetically programmed. Again these focus on competition,
leadership, possessiveness, aggression, social and sexual inequality
and an alleged drive to be territorial but, again, all these are
behaviour patterns that reflect capitalism. 

Ever since it became the dominant system its defenders have presented
economic individualism and competition as an expression of our human
nature and therefore the natural order of things. But if this were
true, then throughout all history, society would never have varied. 

If our social arrangements were determined by our biology then there
would never have been the great diversity of behaviour patterns,
relationships and culture that is the real story of our past and which
is evident even in the way we live now. The arguments that our
behaviour is determined by our physical inheritance may pose as science
but in reality they are socially determined prejudice used as part of
crude political ideology.

These are some of the attitudes that were discussed at the
well-attended Day School on Human Nature in London in June. The
discussion also considered what we can learn from art and language in
understanding the human make-up; the answers to objections to socialism
on grounds of human nature; and whether we can form conclusions from
needs. Also, because the subject of human nature is clouded by racism,
nationalism, and vested interests, the day school considered what we
can say about human nature that is scientifically based and would be
true of all people regardless of culture and changes throughout
history.

Toolmaking, language and thought

We can certainly define features of human nature that mark us off from
other species and which predispose us to live as social beings. These
act together and include the ability to walk upright, binocular colour
vision, hands with opposable thumbs, organs capable of speech, and the
ability to think conceptually. 

In combination these features led to a species whose behaviour is not
biologically determined but is flexible and versatile. These physical
features also led to a labour process, a tradition of toolmaking and an
ability to accumulate experience socially. This meant that improvements
in technique achieved by one generation could be passed on to the next
who might then work out their own improvements. 

Computers and space vehicles are in the same line of tool development
as were the improvements in flint-working technique during the long
period of the paleolithic. Seen in this light, society is itself a
product of labour.

It may have been that this toolmaking tradition played a key part in
the development of human consciousness. The tools made by early human
kind objectified the existence of the tool makers and in contemplating
this they become conscious of their own existence. This reflection of
their own lives in their own creations may have led to a heightened
self awareness and an ability to think in an expanded timeframe of
past, present and future. 

Language could then develop from basic references to material objects
to higher levels of abstract thought which expressed a developing, more
complex vision of their world. It was possibly then that humanity
created ideas and culture, becoming less instinctive and more
decision-making. 

Through this dynamic interaction between human characteristics and the
environment which was essentially the labour process, humankind not
only altered their conditions of life, they changed themselves. What
this required was not an invariable set of behaviour patterns
programmed by genetic coding but adaptability.

Predisposed for co-operation

But none of this would have been possible without co-operation. Whilst
we may not say that co-operation is programmed through our genes, it is
certainly predisposed by our physical make-up. It was agreed at the Day
School that without co-operation society would never have got off the
ground. To say that we are naturally co-operative is much closer to the
truth than saying we are naturally competitive.

This is the case for at least two important reasons. Firstly, by
co-operating with others through a division of labour we greatly
increase what we can produce for our mutual benefit. This is not only
true of the consumption of goods; co-operation has led to our enjoyment
of art, music, drama, sport and all entertainment. It has led to
science and our greatly expanded knowledge of the world, its systems
and its place in the universe. Without all these things made possible
by co-operation, life would not just be impoverished, it would be
unthinkable.

But co-operation gives us more than material benefits. It is through
co-operation that we develop as individuals. Our individuality grows
and finds its expression in relation to others and this would be
impossible in social isolation. In this process of individual growth we
draw not only on personal relationships, we draw on society in general
and even on the lives of those who lived in the past.

Co-operation is sometimes said to be impossible because there is an
inherent conflict between self-interest and the interests of others. In
fact, the reverse is true. The interests of the individual are best
realised when people are working together. The best achievements of one
person can enhance the lives of all people.

The Day School was discussing human nature in a political context. This
became a question of which social aims and relationships would be
compatible with the human make-up – those of capitalism or socialism?
In this choice there can be no contest. The profit system with its
power structures, corporate greed and exploitation divides humanity. It
creates hate, death and destruction and starves half the world's
people. 

Through common ownership and production solely for needs socialism will
unite all people in organising and working for common interests. These
are the relationships in which co-operation and all the best qualities
of being human will find their full expression.

Jan

www.worldsocialism.org



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