I have been doing some reading on Genes and heredity.
I find the subject to be fascinating. How
are we made ? What influences how we look, how we behave, how we interact ?
Is
it Genes or is it our experiences and upbringing ?
The debate of Nature vs Nurture has been on since the last two centuries.
The term “Nature vs Nurture” was first coined by Francis Galton (1869) , the
second cousin of Charles Darwin.
He theorized that parents
transferred intelligence to their children, who in turn passed these
intelligent-boosting genes down to their offspring.
He argued that the
ancestry and a person’s genes were responsible for the characteristics the
person possesses. On the other side, the social learning theory says that how a
person behaves can be linked to influences such as parenting
styles and learned
experiences. For example, a child might learn through observation and
reinforcement to say 'please' and 'thank you.'
Another child might learn to
behave aggressively by observing older children engage in violent behavior on
the playground. In his famous Bobo doll
experiment, it was demonstrated that children could learn
aggressive behaviors simply by observing another person acting aggressively.
Galton
was also the father of “Eugenics “. “Eu”
means good and “genics“ means race, stock, kins. His revolutionary idea to improve the
population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable
heritable characteristics. To make it simple, the theory of eugenics
talks about elimination of the “weak”, the “bad” genetic traits by eliminating
the “breeding “ of the negative people !
Sounds terrifying … ! In the
1920’s the American Eugenics Society campaigned for the sterilization of men
and women in psychiatric hospitals. However the most chilling of all implications
drawn from this view of the natural superiority of one race over another took
place in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany.
Coming
to think of it, genes definitely has a
major role to play in shaping up the constitution of a person – both physical and mental
. There have been experiments involving
twins who have been separated at birth – they have been found to have eerily
similar looks, physical traits like colour of the eyes, gait, hair, medical
history and also their behavior patterns like their likes, dislikes, mental
makeup, intelligence level etc . Is it a
mere coincidence that the famous litterateur Upendra Kishore Ray’s son was the
famous author Sukumar Ray and his son was the famous author, filmmaker Satyajit
Ray ? Similarly, is it just by chance that Collin Hanks , the son of Tom Hanks
, is equally , if not better actor ?
This
brings me back to another age old debate : Is Leadership in the genes ? Some
research say that leadership is found to be “hard-wired” in people till they
reach their early twenties. But
similarly, many experiments have also shown that leadership can be nurtured by
using suitable environment and reinforcement techniques.
It has
been observed that families tend to have similarities in terms of individual
family members moving into leadership positions. Examples are Presidents John F. Kennedy, George Bush, and
others who have family members that have taken on leadership roles.
However, there is a problem of determining whether such communality is genetic
or environmentally produced because families have both environments (e.g.
similar wealth, educational opportunities, etc.) as well as genes in
common—thus determining whether leadership is caused by genetic or
environmental factors is impossible to fathom.
For
me, as written in a few of my earlier
posts, I go by instinct when I have to recruit a leader and while promoting a
person to a leadership role, I go by my instinct as well as my observation. I
find that if a person has succeeded in organizing and coordinating any game or
an event successfully , he is a potential leader. If a person is open to
feedback, has good comprehension ability,
good interpersonal skills , he has leadership in him/her. If a person is not afraid of taking up
challenges, appreciates others and has a good sense of humour, it accounts for his
leadership genes.
Though
the ethical code of conduct in organizations do not permit asking questions about
the heritage of the employee , but looking at the pace of change in the area of technology as well as the society, the day might not be too far off when
looking up a potential leader thru an app (maybe) will tell us the full genealogy
of the person , aiding the organization to take a decision whether to invest
resources in him or not .
Will “Survival of the fittest“ go to it's extremities
and cast a societal holocaust as it did in Germany during Hitler ?
Scary ,
isn’t it ?