FATALReviewRebuttal

From RPGnet
Revision as of 07:24, 11 June 2012 by 108.166.68.179 (talk) (JkpQHQAZswDF)
Jump to: navigation, search

The main consensus thus far is that humnas do have shared tendencies.although these tendencies can be nurtured or condemned early in the childs life, according to the preference of his/her caretakers. In a particularly Christian environment, for example, a child may simply never develop the ability to think critically about God, and thus accepts yours or a similar worldview from an early stage. It becomes so ingrained into his/her consciousness that it essentially becomes their values. On the other hand, a child may grow up in the same environment and come to think so critically of God that he/she develops a lack of belief/faith in God and turns away from Christianity. The same phenomenon appears in atheist or other non-christian families; a child may follow in the footsteps of his/her parents, or go another way entirely. It is not possible to say with 100% (or even close to 100%) certainty why this is; there are no certain values that are always or never created/lost in this process; it is always different, and the result is always different.