Table of contents |
2 Nature versus nurture 3 The natural and the artificial 4 Related concepts 5 See also |
In scale, 'nature' includes everything from the universal to the subatomic. This includes all things animal, plant, and mineral; all natural resources and events (hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes). It also includes the behaviour of living animals, and the processes associated with inanimate objects.
A fundamental difference of view exists between those who include humans (both their consciousness and their activities) within nature, and those who do not.
In discussions about the relative importance of genetic and environmental influences on development, the nature/nurture dichotomy (see Nature_versus_nurture) is often advanced. Here both meanings of nature seem to apply: on the one hand, the environment is contrasted with the innate character of the individual in these discussions, and on the other, it is generally supposed that this character is determined by the individual's physical nature (e.g. genetic endowment).
Nature is sometimes understood in the broad sense of the universe and all its phenomena, but a distinction is often drawn between the "natural" and the "artificial". Can such a distinction be justified? One approach is to exclude mind from the realm of the natural; another is to exclude not only mind, but also humans and their influence. The boundary between the natural and the artificial, is a difficult one to draw, leading to ambiguities which animate much of art, literature and philosophy, and which echo those of the closely related mind-body problem. By not excluding mind and humans from nature (and by not divorcing mind and brain) these ambiguities are avoided.
The term natural science is used in a variety of ways, primarily:
Natural theology straddles the disciplines of theology and philosophy of religion.
In education and related areas, the contrast "natural/artificial" can appear as " nature/nurture".
See also: praeternatural, unnatural and supernatural.
The natural world
Nature versus nurture
The natural and the artificial
Related concepts
The term natural philosophy formerly named the scientific discipline now known as physics.See also
simple:Nature