How does an individual transfer himself into a social creature from a biological creature? Explain.
Answers
Answer:
Biological and social are not mutually exclusive. Many animals, especially mammals are social to a certain degree, some more than others.
Precocial animals (turkeys, bunnies) are born with just about everything they need to survive and require little parental time (sometimes just months).
Altricial animals (humans are altricial) require longer parental time to learn everything they need to function as adults.
In addition, humans are very dependent on language, and how well accepted they are in society. So they’re wired to mimic and learn by repetition, and to understand and express language (semiotics, as a branch of semantics, is the study of these phenomena, where meaning is culturally or instinctively assigned to symbols and sounds).
Humans don’t change into anything. They are born well designed to be social to the highest degree. But because they are altricial, it takes time to absorb (socially) all the skills to be a functioning member of the version of society they’re born into.
We depend so much on our interaction with others that even if you are in the worse place imaginable, in jail, it is considered a worse form of punishment to take you away from a group where you could easily be a victim of and put you in “solitary confinement”.
People who are alone for long periods slowly fall apart mentally; over months they experience depression, and over a few years they start acting weird (lose some of the social skills that go unpracticed), and over decades they even lose a considerable part of their vocabulary by not communicating.
We are nothing but social beings; everything we are and all we do is with others, through others, for others.
Explanation:
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