humankind$36189$ - translation to italian
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humankind$36189$ - translation to italian

FUNDAMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS OF HUMAN BEINGS
Nature of humanity; Humanness; Nature of mankind; Nature of humankind
  • Portrait of [[Mencius]], a Confucian philosopher
  • Statue of [[Shang Yang]], a prominent Legalist scholar and statesman

humankind      
n. umanità, genere umano
human nature         
natura umana, gli umani
Homo sapiens         
  • Egypt]]
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  • Basic anatomical features of female and male humans. These models have had [[body hair]] and male [[facial hair]] removed and head hair trimmed. The female model is wearing red [[nail polish]] on her [[toenails]] and a ring on her left hand.
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  • Akkadian]]
  • [[Shango]], the [[Orisha]] of fire, lightning, and thunder, in the [[Yoruba religion]], depicted on horseback
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  •  Humans and their domesticated animals represent 96% of all mammalian biomass on earth, whereas all wild mammals represent only 4%.<ref name="Bar-On" />
  • The [[Dunhuang map]], a [[star map]] showing the North Polar region. China circa 700.
  • early human migration]] during the [[Upper Paleolithic]], following to the [[Southern Dispersal]] paradigm
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  • Changes in the number and order of genes (A–D) create genetic diversity within and between population.
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  • Karyotype}}
  • Humans often live in family-based social structures
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  • Lucy]]'','' the first ''[[Australopithecus afarensis]]'' skeleton found
  • Drawing of the [[human brain]], showing several important structures
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  • Illustration of grief from [[Charles Darwin]]'s 1872 book ''[[The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals]]''
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  • Humans living in [[Bali]], [[Indonesia]], preparing a meal
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  • Egyptian]], drawing by an unknown artist after a mural of the tomb of [[Seti I]]
  • The [[Silk Road]] (red) and spice [[trade routes]] (blue)
  • Parents can display [[familial love]] for their children.
  • A 10&nbsp;mm [[human embryo]] at 5 weeks
  • United Nations headquarters]] in New York City, which houses one of the world's largest political organizations
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COMMON NAME OF HOMO SAPIENS, UNIQUE EXTANT SPECIES OF THE GENUS HOMO, FROM EMBRYO TO ADULT
HomoSapiens; Humans; Human being; Theories of the origin of humans; Humankind; Human Being; Homo Sapiens; Homo sapien; Human race; Alternative views on the origin of mankind; Human beings; Human species; Human Beings; H. sapiens; Modern humans; Modern Human; Homo Sapien; Homosapiens; Human Origins; Human kind; Homo sapien sapiens; Humans as primates; Man (anthropology and biology); Homo sapian; Human habitat; Homosapian; Human specie; Terran (Homo Sapien); Homo sapein; Early Homo sapiens; Huamn; Human habitat and population; H Sapiens; Homo sapiens (Middle Paleolithic); East African Plains Ape; Modern homo sapiens; Anatomically Modern Humans; H. Sapiens; Humxn; The human race; Peoplekind; Homo sapiens; Species 5618; User:Humanbegin; User:Laughing with happiness; Mankind
Homo Sapiens, ominide diretto antenato dell"uomo moderno

Definition

human nature
Human nature is the natural qualities and ways of behaviour that most people have.
It seems to be human nature to worry.
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipedia

Human nature

Human nature is a concept that denotes the fundamental dispositions and characteristics—including ways of thinking, feeling, and acting—that humans are said to have naturally. The term is often used to denote the essence of humankind, or what it 'means' to be human. This usage has proven to be controversial in that there is dispute as to whether or not such an essence actually exists.

Arguments about human nature have been a central focus of philosophy for centuries and the concept continues to provoke lively philosophical debate. While both concepts are distinct from one another, discussions regarding human nature are typically related to those regarding the comparative importance of genes and environment in human development (i.e., 'nature versus nurture'). Accordingly, the concept also continues to play a role in academic fields, such as both the natural and the social sciences, and philosophy, in which various theorists claim to have yielded insight into human nature. Human nature is traditionally contrasted with human attributes that vary among societies, such as those associated with specific cultures.

The concept of nature as a standard by which to make judgments is traditionally said to have begun in Greek philosophy, at least in regard to its heavy influence on Western and Middle Eastern languages and perspectives. By late antiquity and medieval times, the particular approach that came to be dominant was that of Aristotle's teleology, whereby human nature was believed to exist somehow independently of individuals, causing humans to simply become what they become. This, in turn, has been understood as also demonstrating a special connection between human nature and divinity, whereby human nature is understood in terms of final and formal causes. More specifically, this perspective believes that nature itself (or a nature-creating divinity) has intentions and goals, including the goal for humanity to live naturally. Such understandings of human nature see this nature as an "idea", or "form" of a human. However, the existence of this invariable and metaphysical human nature is subject of much historical debate, continuing into modern times.

Against Aristotle's notion 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, John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In his Emile, or On Education, Rousseau wrote: "We do not know what our nature permits us to be." Since the early 19th century, such thinkers as Hegel, Darwin, Freud, Marx, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Sartre, as well as structuralists and postmodernists more generally, have also sometimes argued against a fixed or innate human nature.

Charles Darwin's theory of evolution has particularly changed the shape of the discussion, supporting the proposition that mankind's ancestors were not like mankind today. As in much of modern science, such theories seek to explain with little or no recourse to metaphysical causation. 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.