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4.9 Human development is incorporation of culture.

Studies like the “Wild boy of Averyon” (Itard, 1962) call into question whether human nature exist in isolation from culture. In this early historical study Itard investigated the lack of development in a boy found in the forest of the district of Averyon in France, a boy thought to have survived in the wild without human contact. The boy was devoid of human qualities including the use of speech or recognizable emotional responses. These and similar studies of children brought up in the wild suggest that there are no discernible human qualities developed apart from the interaction of the child with others. Vygotsky had that right when he argued that the origin of human cognition is social interaction (Vygotsky, 1978; see also discussion by another Soviet psychologist Luria, 1976). All cultural development occurs as a result of interaction at the social level, and later represented intra-psychologically. Biological foundations are important as we shall see, however culture is what gives us human features and variations in behavior.

Human development is a function of many influences. Culture mediates between the child and the biological and environmental imperatives. Cole (1996) for example maintained that biology does not interact directly with the ecological context but via the social environment. There is a basic distinction between the ecological context and the environment. More precisely, it is the complex interactions of biology, phylogenetic contributions, and cultural-historical factors that determine individual development. Biological influences are not directly responsible for behavior, as the impact on the child occurs through the filter of cultural values. Culture frames the social interactions that are eventually responsible for the internalization of cultural values.

Cultural values also play important roles in lifespan development (Baltes, 1997). Here biology and culture also interact dynamically. Evolutionary selection benefits derived from biology decrease in effectiveness with increasing age as the genome of older people produce more dysfunctional genes. The benefits of biological selection for fitness really have no role to play in later life, since evolutionary pressures for selection have passed with the end of the childbearing age at around 30 years. Biological decline is associated with greater demand on culture for a variety of support resources that provide culturally based functioning in the later stage of the lifespan. Lifespan development through all the stages of life is dependent on the continual interaction of genetic heritage with what culture can offer in support. Culture can help offset the lower functioning produced by aging through for example improving skills in reading or writing that allows the individual to continue to participate and live actively at a time in life not possible in the dawn of humankind.

4.10 Stage theories of human development: Culturally unique or universal.

Several prominent theorists in developmental psychology have proposed stages of development thought universal for all humans. There is evidence to support this assertion as we now have theories describing stages of cognitive, moral and psychosocial development. Nevertheless the universality is far from established as cultural ideology and the ecological context may prove more influential.

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