Clarifications on Genes and How They Affect Behaviors
It's All in Your Genes ... or is It?
If you are smart, then you owe your parents a "thank you" for giving you good genes. But, if "Would you like fries with that?" is a daily phrase because working at a fast food place is the only job you could get after dropping out of high school, then you aren't really able to blame anyone for that. Your genes do not determine your behavior. There are many things that do influence how a person behaves, but their genes aren't one of them.
Our genes indirectly influence our behavior. Their job isn't to determine behavior, instead it is to create, build, and arrange the physical parts of our bodies. Your genes determine how your eyes are created, and with what color your eyes will be. Genes can determine if a body will be small and thin or tall and wide. Genes don't cause someone to want to fight, but if your genes come together to create a body that is tall, large, and able to build muscle easier, then you may very well want to use your body to fight professionally. Although your genes make it easier for your body to cope with a fighting environment, your genes didn't cause you to want to fight.
Many people think that some people are just born to commit crimes. Although certain environments can create stress and foster aggression, this doesn't mean that people living in those environments are "born to kill," instead they simply have certain parts of your brain, mainly the aggression areas, developing more. Like any muscle, the more it is used, the more it becomes developed. This has nothing to do with genes.
Clarifications on Genes and How They Affect Behaviors
The human brain, one of the things created and organized by your genes.
Credit: Miranda Knox
Copyright: Miranda Knox (sxc.hu)
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Alicia Bodine
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Posted on 11/12/2007 at 4:11:00 AM
A.M. Morgan
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Posted on 11/08/2007 at 1:11:00 AM