Determinants of Human Behavior Have you ever wondered what we have to do? Why do we get healthy when we are angry. When we are suffering, why do we cry? What inspired us to express our behavior in the various situations we entered? People can give us various answers, but there are two theories which are particularly discussed with each other. One view is that action is determined by the free will called liberalism.
Some deterministic forms of the above form include human behavior and perception, but other forms of determinism considers itself as an answer to nature as an argument. They suggest that factors determine the behavior completely. However, as scientific understanding deepens, the most powerful versions of these theories are widely rejected as the sole cause of mistakes. Environmental determinism, also known as climate determinism or geographical determinism, suggests that physical conditions, not social conditions, determine culture. Advocates of environmental determinism often also support behavior decision theory. The main supporters of this concept include Alan Churchill Sper, Ellsworth Huntington, Thomas Griffith Taylor, and perhaps Jared Diamond. Controversial
Social determinism refers to the theory that only social interactions and structures determine individual behavior. Consider specific human behavior such as having a specific sexual orientation, making a murderer, or writing a poem. Social determinists focus only on social phenomena such as customs and expectations, education and interpersonal relationships, to determine whether someone indicates any of these behaviors. They ignore biological and other nonsocial factors such as genetic makeup, physical environment, and so on. Views on nature and biology are regarded as social construction
The biological theory of criminal causation is based on the genetic or physical characteristics of each individual and country. Although it does not mean that his child grows up as a murderer just because he is a murderer. "In the biological theory of the criminal causal relationship in the 1920s and 1930s, especially focusing on genetic mental deterioration, the eugenics of mentally disabled women have a mentally disabled child As historical knowledge, not all physical or mental disorders are hereditary (Schmallenger, 2009).