I am in the process of reading +Edward O Wilson’s book The Social Conquest of the Earth (2012). In the book, he refers to the inheritability
of personality traits and talks about the accepted standard of five broad domains
of personality, which are five broad extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness,
neuroticism, and openness to experience.
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As a veterinarian, I recognize four of the five, with conscientiousness limited
to chimpanzees, bonobo apes, and people. He states that there is “substantial
inheritability mostly falling between one-third and two thirds”. The numerical reference
is to the tried and true approach of partitioning variance, which means scientists
can mathematically attributed the variability of each of the five “domains” of personality
to different factors such as genetic verses family verses, peer groups, etc. For
example, one study estimated the influence of genetics to be extroversion 54%, agreeableness
42%, and conscientiousness 49%, neuroticism 48%, but did not mention openness to
experience.
Wilson cites a study 2005 study conducted by 87 spanning 49
cultures, which found essentially the same result across all these cultures. Scientists
interpret these studies to mean that our genes only account for those percentages
of our behavior with learning counting for the remainder of the variance. In
terms of our behavior, we are about half-genetic robots and half from what we
have learned. Because so many scientists looked at so many cultures, other scientists
treat the results as being irrefutable. The facts are verifiable facts; however,
the interpretation is refutable.
Implying we are not genetic robots, which is presumable done
to sooth our egos because studies show our personalities are only 50% inherited
points out that switching from behavior to personality is too big a switch. I
look at +Dr. Donald Brown’s list of cultural universals and see something
different, a different message—only where there are geographical differences in
cultures (behavior) are they learned the rest is in the genes. Looking at the
big picture created by a the two research efforts, I see inheritability of behavior
as being far above 50%, more like something approaching 100% but of course not
100%.
Keep in mind that chickens act like chickens, dogs act like
dogs, and humans act like humans but only humans have culture. As any pet
owners will tell you, animals have personalities. In contrast, cultural anthropologists
will tell you that, with few exceptions, only humans have culture. As an aside,
the orangutan is the lowest ape deemed by scientists to have the first signs of
culture. The point of this post is that human personality is only a very small
part of our culture. Therefore, the idea that researchers finding the “partitioning
the variance of personalities,” at for example 50% inherited and 50% learned,
means a somewhat smaller part of human overall behavior is learned. Obviously,
there is a lot more to culture than personality. Culture is the characteristics of a particular
group of people: racism, religion, politics, barter, and folkways such as family
structure, sports and entertainment activities, language, food, and social habits
while personality if the characteristic of only one person in that culture. Like
it or not, we are essentially genetic robots.
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