nurture - meaning and definition. What is nurture
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What (who) is nurture - definition

RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF AN INDIVIDUAL'S INNATE QUALITIES ("NATURE" IN THE SENSE OF NATIVISM OR INNATISM) AS COMPARED TO AN INDIVIDUAL'S PERSONAL EXPERIENCES ("NURTURE" IN THE SENSE OF EMPIRICISM OR BEHAVIORISM)
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  • More realistic "homogenous mudpie" view of heritability.
  • The "two buckets" view of heritability.
  • This chart illustrates three patterns one might see when studying the influence of genes and environment on traits in individuals. Trait A shows a high sibling correlation, but little heritability (i.e. high shared environmental variance ''c''<sup>2</sup>; low heritability ''h''<sup>2</sup>). Trait B shows a high heritability since the correlation of trait rises sharply with the degree of genetic similarity. Trait C shows low heritability, but also low correlations generally; this means Trait C has a high nonshared environmental variance ''e''<sup>2</sup>. In other words, the degree to which individuals display Trait C has little to do with either genes or broadly predictable environmental factors—roughly, the outcome approaches random for an individual. Notice also that even identical twins raised in a common family rarely show 100% trait correlation.
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Nurture         
·noun That which nourishes; food; diet.
II. Nurture ·vt To Educate; to bring or train up.
III. Nurture ·vt To Feed; to Nourish.
IV. Nurture ·noun The act of nourishing or nursing; thender care; education; training.
nurture         
I. n.
1.
Nourishment, food, diet.
2.
Training, education, instruction, discipline, tuition schooling, breeding.
3.
Nursing, nourishing, tender care, attention.
II. v. a.
1.
Feed, nourish, nurse, tend.
2.
Train, educate, instruct, school, rear, breed, discipline, bring up, train up.
nurture         
(nurtures, nurturing, nurtured)
1.
If you nurture something such as a young child or a young plant, you care for it while it is growing and developing. (FORMAL)
Parents want to know the best way to nurture and raise their child to adulthood...
The modern conservatory is not an environment for nurturing plants.
VERB: V n, V n
nurturing
She was not receiving warm nurturing care.
ADJ
nurturing
Which adult in these children's lives will provide the nurturing they need?
N-UNCOUNT
2.
If you nurture plans, ideas, or people, you encourage them or help them to develop. (FORMAL)
She had always nurtured great ambitions for her son.
...parents whose political views were nurtured in the sixties...
VERB: V n, V n
nurturing
The decision to cut back on film-making had a catastrophic effect on the nurturing of new talent.
N-UNCOUNT
3.
Nurture is care that is given to someone while they are growing and developing.
The human organism learns partly by nature, partly by nurture.
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipedia

Nature versus nurture

Nature versus nurture is a long-standing debate in biology and society about the balance between two competing factors which determine fate: genetics (nature) and environment (nurture). The alliterative expression "nature and nurture" in English has been in use since at least the Elizabethan period and goes back to medieval French.

The complementary combination of the two concepts is an ancient concept (Ancient Greek: ἁπό φύσεως καὶ εὐτροφίας). Nature is what people think of as pre-wiring and is influenced by genetic inheritance and other biological factors. Nurture is generally taken as the influence of external factors after conception e.g. the product of exposure, experience and learning on an individual.

The phrase in its modern sense was popularized by the Victorian polymath Francis Galton, the modern founder of eugenics and behavioral genetics when he was discussing the influence of heredity and environment on social advancement. Galton was influenced by On the Origin of Species written by his half-cousin, the evolutionary biologist Charles Darwin.

The view that humans acquire all or almost all their behavioral traits from "nurture" was termed tabula rasa ('blank tablet, slate') by John Locke in 1690. A blank slate view (sometimes termed blank-slatism) in human developmental psychology, which assumes that human behavioral traits develop almost exclusively from environmental influences, was widely held during much of the 20th century. The debate between "blank-slate" denial of the influence of heritability, and the view admitting both environmental and heritable traits, has often been cast in terms of nature versus nurture. These two conflicting approaches to human development were at the core of an ideological dispute over research agendas throughout the second half of the 20th century. As both "nature" and "nurture" factors were found to contribute substantially, often in an inextricable manner, such views were seen as naive or outdated by most scholars of human development by the 21st century.

The strong dichotomy of nature versus nurture has thus been claimed to have limited relevance in some fields of research. Close feedback loops have been found in which nature and nurture influence one another constantly, as seen in self-domestication. In ecology and behavioral genetics, researchers think nurture has an essential influence on nature. Similarly in other fields, the dividing line between an inherited and an acquired trait becomes unclear, as in epigenetics or fetal development.

Examples of use of nurture
1. Kiir, Nurture self–accountability and self–government.
2. We‘re finding that nature and nurture work together.
3. Women till the fields, raise families, and nurture society.
4. Now, they gravitate toward obscure mosques that nurture homegrown extremists.
5. They nurture them, encourage them and hold on to them.