Lagayascienza wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2024, 2:39 am LuckyR, I'm open to other ideas, but if those fears is not inherited, then how else would they be transmitted down through the generations. Fear of heights, for example, in bipedal apes like us, could not have been worked out by each individual ape from scratch. Don't you think that a tabula rasa on which learned fears essential for survival are painted would have been too slow and inefficient. Just as we are born to feel hunger and thirst so that we seek out food and water, so, it seems to me, we are born to feel fear in order to forestall certain dangers that would have presented to our ancestors out on the savanna much more frequently than they do to us today. As usual, I think evolution came up with a quick and dirty solution that worked well enough. It meant that most of us don't go stepping of cliffs.I would be cautious on how we attribute specific responses to specific situations as a result of specific survival adaptations. It is possible, for example, that we have an innate predisposition to balance and control the center of gravity of our bodies, so we react with alertness and fear when exposed to risk of losing that balance, then everything else comes from applying the learned basic experience to other situations after repeated observations and the corresponding inferences, such as understanding what is falling off a cliff. We might be using simultaneously other combinations of basic predispositions and real life scenarios, such as protection from heavy impacts. That's why we can also "unlearn" fears that seem pretty common and instinctive, as well as we can learn to fear new things. I doubt that everyone fears spiders and heights instinctively. Whatever the case, I'm terrorized by both.
― Marcus Tullius Cicero