Human Nature Rated 4.9 / 5 based on 823 reviews.

Human Nature gostream

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genres Documentary / release Year 2019 / liked it 163 Vote / Countries USA / &ref(https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BODM1MzM2MzEtMTgyZS00NjAzLWE3ZmItNGNiZjY0MWNmMjlmXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyOTM5NzYzNTU@._V1_SY1000_CR0,0,629,1000_AL_.jpg) / 8 / 10 star. Michael wouldnt even have to try to steal my girl ima just give her to him??? r.i.p to the king???.
Michael Jackson - Baby Be Mine 2019. Human Nature NEW SINGLE "Nobody Just Like You" NEW Single "Nobody Just Like You". I could watch this performance and this Most Beautiful man everyday, Forever in love with him!??. Who still listening all the way in 2020. ??. If this song was considered filler on this album, then that just goes to show how strong this album is.
Love this Toto song with Michael Jackson on vocals. Human Nature (Official Site) - 100% No harmful chemicals - Made in the Philippines. Is no one going to talk about 1:44 - 2:10. This song needs to be bumped in some 60's convertible driving down along the highway with the beach in the background. Woaw 10 years ago ? I remember like if it was yesterday. Michael sang the shit out of this song! RIP King. The intro geeks me every time ???♀?????. I know its a memorial service, but at 2:15 on he makes me wish this was a good. Human Nature Documentary Film Official Page Wonder Collaborative 2020-03-26T21:20:55-07:00 “Thorough, lucid, and engaging” ? The Boston Globe Synopsis From executive producer Dan Rather and director Adam Bolt, the co-writer and editor of the Oscar-winning film Inside Job, comes the story of the biggest tech revolution of the 21st Century. And it isn’t digital, it’s biological. A breakthrough called CRISPR has given us unprecedented control over the basic building blocks of life. It opens the door to curing diseases, reshaping the biosphere, and designing our own children. Human Nature is a provocative exploration of CRISPR’s far-reaching implications, through the eyes of the scientists who discovered it, the families it’s affecting, and the bioengineers who are testing its limits. How will this new power change our relationship with nature? What will it mean for human evolution? To begin to answer these questions we must look back billions of years and peer into an uncertain future. Synopsis From executive producer Dan Rather and director Adam Bolt, the co-writer and editor of the Oscar-winning film Inside Job, comes the story of the biggest tech revolution of the 21st Century. Watch On Demand If you are interested in educational or community screening/streaming options, please fill out the “Host a Screening” form below and we will get back to you! Past Screenings Date(s) Festival/Theater Location 3/10/19, 3/12/19, 3/14/19 SXSW Austin, TX 3/25/19, 3/27/19, 3/29/19 CPH:DOX Copenhagen, Denmark 4/5/19 Full Frame Durham, NC 4/26/19, 4/28/19 AFO Olomouc, Czech Republic 4/27/19, 4/28/19, 4/30/19 Hot Docs Toronto, Canada 5/2/19 Newport Beach FF Newport Beach, CA 5/17/19, 5/25/19, 5/27/19 Seattle International FF Seattle, WA 6/22/19 AFI Docs Washington, D. C. 6/23/19 Silbersalz Science & Media Festival Halle, Germany 7/31/19 Woods Hole FF Woods Hole, MA 8/17/19 Savonlinna International Nature FF Savonlinna, Finland 9/12/19 Visioni dal Mondo Milan, Italy 9/14/19, 9/15/19, 9/16/19, 9/18/19 Homer Documentary Film Festival Homer, AK 9/23/19 Jackson Wild Summit Jackson, WY 9/28/19 Sausalito Film Festival Sausalito, CA 9/26/19, 10/1/19, 10/2/19 Bergen International Film Festival Bergen, Norway 10/3/19 Globe Docs Boston, MA 9/27/19, 9/28/19, 10/10/19 Vancouver International Film Festival Vancouver, Canada 10/4/19 ? 10/10/19 Hot Docs Cinema Toronto, Canada 10/13/19 Orcas Island Film Festival Eastsound, WA 10/5/19, 10/14/19 Doctober Bellingham, WA 10/21/19 Hot Springs Documentary FF Hot Springs, AR 10/18/19-10/24/19 Bytowne Cinema Ottawa, Canada 10/25/19 FilmColumbia Chatham, NY 10/26/19 Pariscience Film Festival Paris, France 10/28/19 Bay Area Science Festival, Roxie Theater San Francisco, CA 10/31/19 41 North Film Festival Houghton, MI 11/2/19 Windsor Film Festival Windsor, ON 11/3/19 Doctober Bellingham, WA 11/1/19 ? 11/7/19 Hyland Cinema London, ON 11/5/19 Scottsdale International Film Festival Scottsdale, AZ 11/6/19 Cinemateket Oslo, Norway 11/7/19 Life Sciences Film Festival Prague, Czech Republic 11/9/19 DOC NYC New York, NY 11/11/19 Goucher College Towson, MD 11/12/19 ? 11/26/19 Broadcast/Streaming on DBS ? YesDocu! Israel 11/15/19, 11/19/19, 11/20/19, 11/28/19 Black Nights Film Festival Tallinn, Estonia 11/17/19 Yukon Arts Centre Whitehorse, YT 11/21/19 Vega Scene Oslo, Norway 11/29/19 Science Museum London, UK 12/2/19 Midlands Arts Centre Birmingham, UK 12/6/19 Bertha DocHouse London, UK 12/7/19 Global Health Film Festival London, UK 11/7/19-12/26/19 Screenings in various German cities Germany 12/3/19 Broadcast/Streaming on NRK Norway 12/18/19 Regent Street Cinema London, UK 1/8/20 Broadcast/Streaming on VPRO Netherlands 1/15/20 Soho House Oxfordshire, UK 1/23/20 ? 1/26/20 Reframe Film Festival Peterborough, Canada 1/22/20, 1/27/20 Tournai Ramdam Festival Tournai, Belgium 1/29/20 Shuswap Film Society Salmon Arm, BC, Canada 2/6/20 Paramount Theatre ? Kamloops Film Society Kamloops, BC, Canada 2/7/20 Everyman Cinema Liverpool, UK 2/12/20 MAC Birmingham, UK 2/15/20 Woods Hole Film Festival’s Film Falmouth series Falmouth, MA 2/19/20 The Ultimate Picture Palace Oxford, UK 2/22/20 KDocsFF Surrey, Canada 2/24/20, 2/28/20 Sedona International Film Festival Sedona, AZ 2/28/20 Salt Spring Film Festival Salt Spring, BC, Canada 3/7/20 Belleville Downtown DocFest Belleville, ON, Canada 3/13/20 ? 3/20/20 The Village East Cinema NYC, NY 3/13/20 ? 3/20/20 Landmark’s Shattuck Cinemas Berkeley, CA Sign-up for our Newsletter for updates about Human Nature Adam Bolt Director Adam Bolt edited and co-wrote the Oscar-winning documentary Inside Job, for which he received the Writer’s Guild Award for Best Documentary Screenplay and was nominated for an American Cinema Editors award for Best Edited Documentary in 2011. He won an Emmy in 2014 for his work on the Showtime documentary series Years of Living Dangerously, where he served as senior producer, writer, and editor. His other credits include director Alex Gibney’s Park Avenue: Money, Power & The American Dream, which premiered on PBS’s Independent Lens and went on to win a Peabody Award in 2013; Page One: Inside the New York Times, which was nominated for two Emmys (including Best Editing) in 2012; and the HBO documentary The Recruiter, which won a Columbia duPont award for excellence in broadcast journalism in 2010. Elliot Kirschner Executive Producer Elliot Kirschner is the Executive Producer of the Wonder Collaborative, a New York Times best-selling author, and Emmy-award winning news and documentary producer. He got his start at CBS News, producing for such programs as 60 Minutes, Sunday Morning and the Evening News. In 2007, Kirschner joined legendary news icon Dan Rather to help manage a cable news and documentary program where he commissioned and oversaw numerous science reports. He joined iBiology in 2015 and is currently leading the group’s efforts to create content for the general public. His 2017 book What Unites Us: Reflections on Patriotism, written with Dan Rather, was a bestseller. Regina Sobel Editor/Co-Writer Regina Sobel is a Brooklyn-based film editor and producer. She was the editor and co-writer of Fail State (Starz), a feature documentary about inequality in higher education which premiered at DOC NYC in 2017. She also served as editor and producer on Old Dog, a verite documentary about sheep dog training in New Zealand, and associate editor on Alex Ross Perry’s Queen of Earth (IFC Films), starring Elisabeth Moss. Previously, she produced and directed graphics for film and TV, including PBS’s Park Avenue: Money, Power & the American Dream, Showtime’s “Years of Living Dangerously, ” and HBO’s “Game of Thrones. ” Meredith DeSalazar Producer Meredith DeSalazar is an award-winning news producer with over 13 years experience. She started at ABC News covering the presidential election, then researching and producing for World News Tonight. She joined news legend Dan Rather 10 years ago producing investigative stories, often with a science focus such as: the environmental impact of stormwater runoff, the dark underworld of shark finning and the invasion of lionfish into foreign waters. She was the first television reporter to raise red flags about the danger of concussions and the NFL’s efforts to sweep the issue under the rug. Sarah Goodwin Producer Sarah Goodwin is the leading science advisor on the film. She is the Executive Director of the Wonder Collaborative and iBiology, a non-profit that produces videos by the world’s leading biologists. Before joining iBiology, she got her Ph. D. in Cell Biology from the University of California, San Francisco. Under her leadership, iBiology has grown in staff and scope, and has produced hundreds of videos with millions of yearly views. Sarah has worked with a wide variety of scientists on communicating their research and stories, and has ensured the science content in this film is accurate in depicting the state of knowledge and the spirit of discovery. Derek Reich Cinematographer Derek Reich is an Emmy Award winning cinematographer who has traveled to datelines around the globe to capture the images needed for visual storytelling. After getting his start covering the American West for CBS News, Derek expanded into documentary filmmaking with an emphasis on cinematically arresting narratives. He will regale you with stories of bears and dogs. Steve Tyler Editor Steve Tyler is an Emmy Award winning documentary film editor and long-time collaborator with Human Nature executive producers Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner. Before taking up editing, Steve could be found on Broadway or in theaters around the country as an accomplished music director for shows like The Producers, Jane Eyre and The Sound of Music. Greg Boustead Executive Producer Greg Boustead is the Program Director at Science Sandbox, an initiative of the Simons Foundation that he helped launch in 2015 to inspire a deeper interest in science, especially among those who don’t think of themselves as science fans. With a background in neuroscience, film, and journalism, Greg has dedicated his career to bringing sophisticated science content to general audiences, across many platforms. Other credits include executive producer of the feature-length documentary The Most Unknown, co-produced with VICE Media/Motherboard and released by Netflix in 2018. Dan Rather Executive Producer Dan Rather is one of the world’s best-kn
Great guys. Will you visit Spain sometime? Please advise me. Watching now! March. 21, 2020. Home Quarantine because of (Covid 19. I luv U MJ! ??. R.i.P I cried when he died. I was almost in kindergarten when he died.

Human nature is a bundle of characteristics, including ways of thinking, feeling, and acting, which humans are said to have naturally. [1] [2] [3] [4] The term is often regarded as capturing what it is to be human, or the essence of humanity. The term is controversial because it is disputed whether or not such an essence exists. Arguments about human nature have been a mainstay of philosophy for centuries and the concept continues to provoke lively philosophical debate. [5] [6] [7] The concept also continues to play a role in science, with neuroscientists, psychologists and social scientists sometimes claiming that their results have yielded insight into human nature. [8] [9] [10] [11] Human nature is traditionally contrasted with characteristics that vary among humans, such as characteristics associated with specific cultures. Debates about human nature are related to, although not the same as, debates about the comparative importance of genes and environment in development (" nature versus nurture "). The concept of nature as a standard by which to make judgments is traditionally said to have begun in Greek philosophy, at least as regards the Western and Middle Eastern languages and perspectives which are heavily influenced by it. [12] The teleological approach of Aristotle came to be dominant by late classical and medieval times. By this account, human nature really causes humans to become what they become, and so it exists somehow independently of individuals. This in turn has been understood as also showing a special connection between human nature and divinity. This approach understands human nature in terms of final and formal causes. In other words, nature itself (or a nature-creating divinity) has intentions and goals, similar somehow to human intentions and goals, and one of those goals is humanity living naturally. Such understandings of human nature see this nature as an "idea", or " form " of a human. [13] However, the existence of this invariable and metaphysical human nature is subject of much historical debate, continuing into modern times. Against this idea of a fixed human nature, the relative malleability of man has been argued especially strongly in recent centuries?firstly by early modernists such as Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In Rousseau's Emile, or On Education, Rousseau wrote: "We do not know what our nature permits us to be". [14] Since the early 19th century, thinkers such as Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre, structuralists, and postmodernists have also sometimes argued against a fixed or innate human nature. Charles Darwin 's theory of evolution has changed the nature of the discussion, supporting the proposition that mankind's ancestors were not like mankind today. Still more recent scientific perspectives?such as behaviorism, determinism, and the chemical model within modern psychiatry and psychology ?claim to be neutral regarding human nature. As in much of modern science, such disciplines seek to explain with little or no recourse to metaphysical causation. [15] They can be offered to explain the origins of human nature and its underlying mechanisms, or to demonstrate capacities for change and diversity which would arguably violate the concept of a fixed human nature. Classical Greek philosophy [ edit] Philosophy in classical Greece is the ultimate origin [ citation needed] of the Western conception of the nature of a thing. According to Aristotle, the philosophical study of human nature itself originated with Socrates, who turned philosophy from study of the heavens to study of the human things. [16] Socrates is said to have studied the question of how a person should best live, but he left no written works. It is clear from the works of his students Plato and Xenophon, and also by what was said about him by Aristotle (Plato's student), that Socrates was a rationalist and believed that the best life and the life most suited to human nature involved reasoning. The Socratic school was the dominant surviving influence in philosophical discussion in the Middle Ages, amongst Islamic, Christian, and Jewish philosophers. The human soul in the works of Plato and Aristotle has a divided nature, divided in a specifically human way. One part is specifically human and rational, and divided into a part which is rational on its own, and a spirited part which can understand reason. Other parts of the soul are home to desires or passions similar to those found in animals. In both Aristotle and Plato, spiritedness ( thumos) is distinguished from the other passions ( epithumiai). [17] The proper function of the "rational" was to rule the other parts of the soul, helped by spiritedness. By this account, using one's reason is the best way to live, and philosophers are the highest types of humans. Aristotle?Plato's most famous student?made some of the most famous and influential statements about human nature. In his works, apart from using a similar scheme of a divided human soul, some clear statements about human nature are made: Man is a conjugal animal, meaning an animal which is born to couple when an adult, thus building a household ( oikos) and, in more successful cases, a clan or small village still run upon patriarchal lines. [18] Man is a political animal, meaning an animal with an innate propensity to develop more complex communities the size of a city or town, with a division of labor and law-making. This type of community is different in kind from a large family, and requires the special use of human reason. [19] Man is a mimetic animal. Man loves to use his imagination (and not only to make laws and run town councils). He says "we enjoy looking at accurate likenesses of things which are themselves painful to see, obscene beasts, for instance, and corpses. " And the "reason why we enjoy seeing likenesses is that, as we look, we learn and infer what each is, for instance, 'that is so and so. ' " [20] For Aristotle, reason is not only what is most special about humanity compared to other animals, but it is also what we were meant to achieve at our best. Much of Aristotle's description of human nature is still influential today. However, the particular teleological idea that humans are "meant" or intended to be something has become much less popular in modern times. [21] For the Socratics, human nature, and all natures, are metaphysical concepts. Aristotle developed the standard presentation of this approach with his theory of four causes. Every living thing exhibits four aspects or "causes": matter, form, effect, and end. For example, an oak tree is made of plant cells (matter), grew from an acorn (effect), exhibits the nature of oak trees (form), and grows into a fully mature oak tree (end). Human nature is an example of a formal cause, according to Aristotle. Likewise, to become a fully actualized human being (including fully actualizing the mind) is our end. Aristotle ( Nicomachean Ethics, Book X) suggests that the human intellect (νούς) is "smallest in bulk" but the most significant part of the human psyche, and should be cultivated above all else. The cultivation of learning and intellectual growth of the philosopher, which is thereby also the happiest and least painful life. Chinese philosophy [ edit] Confucianism [ edit] Portrait of Mencius, a Confucian philosopher Human nature is a central question in Chinese philosophy. [22] From the Song dynasty, the theory of potential or innate goodness of human beings became dominant in Confucianism. [23] Mencius argues that human nature is good. [22] [24] He understands human nature as the innate tendency to an ideal state that's expected to be formed under the right conditions. [25] Therefore, humans have the capacity to be good, even though they are not all good. [25] According to Mencian theory, human nature contains four beginnings (端, duan) of morality: [26] a sense of compassion that develops into benevolence (仁, ren), a sense of shame and disdain that develops into righteousness (義, yi), a sense of respect and courtesy that develops into propriety (禮, li), and a sense of right and wrong that develops into wisdom (智, zhi). [24] [26] The beginnings of morality are characterized by both affective motivations and intuitive judgments (such as what's right and wrong, deferential, respectful, or disdainful). [26] In Mencius' view, goodness is the result of the development of innate tendencies toward the virtues of benevolence, righteousness, wisdom, and propriety. [24] The tendencies are manifested in moral emotions for every human being. [24] Reflection (思, si) upon the manifestations of the four beginnings leads to the development of virtues. [24] It brings recognition that virtue takes precedence over satisfaction, but a lack of reflection inhibits moral development. [26] In other words, humans have a constitution comprising emotional predispositions that direct them to goodness. [24] Mencius also addresses the question why the capacity for evil is not grounded in human nature. [24] If an individual becomes bad, it is not the result of his or her constitution, as their constitution contains the emotional predispositions that direct to goodness, but a matter of injuring or not fully developing his or her constitution in the appropriate direction. [24] He recognizes desires of the senses as natural predispositions distinct from the four beginnings. [26] People can be misled and led astray by their desires if they do not engage their ethical motivations. [24] He therefore places responsibility on people to reflect on the manifestations of the four beginnings. [26] Herein, it is not the function of ears and eyes but the function of the heart to reflect, as sensory organs are associated with sensual desires but the heart is the seat of feeling and thinking. [27] Mencius considers core virtues?benevolence, righteousness, propriety, and wisdom?as internal qualities that humans originally possess, so peo
Such a beautiful song>.<.
Human Nature is dedicated to advancing the interdisciplinary investigation of the biological, social, and environmental factors that underlie human behavior. It focuses primarily on the functional unity in which these factors are continuously and mutually interactive. These include the evolutionary, biological, and sociological processes as they interact with human social behavior; the biological and demographic consequences of human history; the cross-cultural, cross-species, and historical perspectives on human behavior; and the relevance of a biosocial perspective to scientific, social, and policy issues. 25 out of 85 on the Anthropology list 20 out of 42 on the Social Sciences, Biomedical list Thomson-Reuters ScienceWatch Top Journals in Anthropology from 2001-2011 Citation Impact: 8. 71 (8/20). SCImago Journal and Country Rank (SJR) 2018: 0. 840 20 out of 357 on the Anthropology list 55 out of 263 on the Art and Humanities (Misc) list 155 out of 591 on the Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics list 39 out of 255 on the Social Science (miscellaneous) list 165 out of 1111 on the Sociology and Political Science list SJR is a measure of the journal’s relative impact in its field, based on its number of citations and number of articles per publication year. Source Normalised Impact per Paper (SNIP) 2018: 1. 021 The SNIP measures contextual citation impact by weighting citations based on the total number of citations in a subject field. The impact of a single citation is given higher value in subject areas where citations are less likely, and vice versa. CiteScore 2018: 2. 18 Investigates the biological, social, and environmental factors that underlie human behavior Focuses primarily on the functional unity in which these factors are continuously and mutually interactive Main Editor Louis Calistro Alvarado Publishing model Hybrid. Open Access options available Journal metrics 2. 148 (2018) Impact factor 2. 699 (2018) Five year impact factor 76 days Submission to first decision 326 days Submission to acceptance 163, 765 (2018) Downloads Editorial board Aims & scope Journal updates Latest issue COVID-19 and impact on peer review As a result of the significant disruption that is being caused by the COVID-19 pandemic we are very aware that many researchers will have difficulty in meeting the timelines associated with our peer review process during normal times. Please do let us know if you need additional time. Our systems will continue to remind you of the original timelines but we intend to be highly flexible at this time. Special Subscription Rate for Society Members! Springer offers members of the following societies a special subscription rate of 50. 00 USD (including postage) for a 1-year print subscription to Human Nature. View all updates About this journal Electronic ISSN 1936-4776 Print ISSN 1045-6767 Abstracted and indexed in CNKI Current Contents / Social & Behavioral Sciences EBSCO Academic Search EBSCO Advanced Placement Source EBSCO Biomedical Reference Collection EBSCO Discovery Service EBSCO Gender Studies Database EBSCO Linguistics Abstracts Online EBSCO Military Transition Support Center EBSCO Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection EBSCO SocINDEX EBSCO Sociological Collection EBSCO Sociology Source Ultimate EMCare Google Scholar Institute of Scientific and Technical Information of China Japanese Science and Technology Agency (JST) Journal Citation Reports/Social Sciences Edition Medline Naver OCLC WorldCat Discovery Service ProQuest Biological Science Database ProQuest Central ProQuest Health & Medical Collection ProQuest Health Research Premium Collection ProQuest International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS) ProQuest Medical Database ProQuest Natural Science Collection ProQuest Psychology Database ProQuest Research Library ProQuest SciTech Premium Collection ProQuest Social Science Collection ProQuest Sociology ProQuest-ExLibris Primo ProQuest-ExLibris Summon PsycINFO Psyndex SCImago SCOPUS Social Science Citation Index Zoological Record.
  1. About The Author - Bill Bixby

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