| 
				
				| You may be able to thank your father for your green eyes and your mother for your slim figure – or not - but have you ever wondered what factors shaped your personality and natural talents? Do you credit your parents or environment for the way you’ve turned out? Or do you believe you’re mostly a product of your genes? |  
				
				|  |  |  
 Scientists are split on the topic. Some believe behavior is predetermined based on genetics; others say people act in the way they’ve been taught. Yet others insist it’s a bit of both. Few, however, can agree on proportion. Those who adhere to the nature theory point to the example of twins being brought up apart who often remain strikingly similar. In the opposing camp is the American psychologist John Watson who says environment trumps genes. He maintains he can train any infant to become a specialist in any subject regardless of his or her natural talents, tendencies and abilities. 
 Here are the arguments: Nurture“Give me the child until he is seven and I will show you the  man,” said the 15th century Spanish knight turned priest Ignatius  Loyola. Scientists who support his argument point to children who at a young  age were mistreated by their parents and kept in isolation. In most cases their  brains fail to develop normally. In recent weeks, the “Oprah Show” shone a  spotlight on a ten-year-old girl called Danielle Crockett who was found in her  mother’s Florida  home at the age of seven surrounded by squalor and wearing nothing but a  diaper.
 She was covered with flea, cockroach and mosquito bites and  was unable to walk properly, use the bathroom, chew, eat solids or communicate.  Danielle has since been adopted by a loving couple but although doctors say  tests show her brain is normal and she has no physical disability, she may  never be able to talk or function. The psychologist who has been treating her  Dr. Kathleen Armstrong says 85 percent of the brain is developed in the first  five years of life. “Those early relationships, more than anything else, help  wire the brain and provide children with the experience to trust, to develop  language, to communicate. They need that system to relate to the world.”  Similarly, so-called ‘feral’ children who were abandoned and  brought-up by wolves display the characteristics of their wild foster parents.  One example is the story of Amala and Kamala two Indian children raised by a  she-wolf until they were rescued by a priest in 1920 and taken to an orphanage.  The girls walked on all-fours, bared their teeth, panted, and preferred to eat  raw meat. There are many such stories which seem to prove that human behavior  such as walking, talking, interacting socially and even washing one’s face is  learned, unlike animal behavior which is predominantly instinctive.  In 2002, a British television company Pepper Productions  decided to launch a televised social experiment called “Second Chance” that  involved a disturbed teenager from a rough neighborhood who had been expelled  from school and spent his time on the fringes of criminality. After gaining  permission from the boy’s mother, the company paid for the boy to attend a  private school in the countryside for three years at the end of which he  excelled in academic studies and also at rugby. Now popular and confident, the  lad expressed his disgust at his former life and was set to take 10 GCSE  examinations.  Many in the nurture camp dislike the idea that genetics  determines intelligence because this implies that some children have a natural  advantage over others less genetically gifted. One academic sought to dispute  that by teaching his daughters of average intelligence to become grand masters  at chess. NatureA controversial book written by the late Harvard  psychologist Richard J. Herrnstein and political scientist Charles Murray  titled “The Bell Curve” argues that intelligence is largely (40% - 80%)  genetically inherited and is variable along racial lines; an assertion which  received a heated academic backlash leaving the authors open to accusations of  racism.
 Studies carried out at the University of California  on 10 pairs of fraternal twins and 10 pairs of identical twins enabled the  researchers to distinguish between genetic and environmental factors. They  discovered that the frontal area of the brain and those areas governing  language showed a 95 – 100 percent correlation among identical twins,  suggesting that their personal experiences and learning played “a negligible  role in shaping” their abilities.  Identical twins Paula Bernstein and Elyse Schein who were  born in New York  were co-opted by a secret nature versus nurture research project that began in  the 1960s. The women had been separated from each other as infants and adopted  out. In 2004, Paula received a phone call from the adoption agency and learned  that she had a twin living in Paris  who was searching for her. They eventually met-up for the first time at the age  of 35 and spent hours in a New York  café catching up with each other’s lives.  Much to their astonishment, despite the fact they grew up  with different families and in different locations, they were very similar.  “It’s not just our taste in music or books, it goes beyond that,” said Paula.  “Since meeting Elyse, it is undeniable that genetics play a huge role –  probably more than 50 percent.” Out of concern for public disapproval, the  study has never been published. Instead, it has been sealed and handed to Yale University  with instructions that it cannot be opened until at least 2066.  In recent times, the nature argument has been strengthened  by advances in genetics. Scientists say they have found a gene they call  Neurod2 or the ‘fearless gene’ that determines whether or not a person is  willing to take risks. Others have announced their discovery of genes related  to attention-deficit disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, manic depression,  autism, addition, extroversion, introversion, novelty-seeking, aggression,  gambling, impulsivity and anxiety. And it is undisputed that a person’s  potential for contracting certain illness such as cancer is accentuated by  their genes.  Behavioral geneticist Dean Hamer of the US National Cancer  Institute who has co-authored the book “Living with Our Genes” writes that his  researchers have demonstrated beyond a doubt that genes are the single most  important factor in distinguishing one individual from another.  “Whether anyone thinks it’s a good idea or not, we will soon  have the ability to change and manipulate human behavior through genetics,” he  writes. He believes that parents will one day be able to design their own  babies to ensure they are healthy, intelligent and talented, which many people  will find unethical if not frightening. In the nature versus nurture debate nothing is  conclusive…and so, it will rage on and on and on.
                 
 |