When posed the question, "which contributes more to personality - nature or nurture?", a psychologist once replied, "which contributes more to the area of a rectangle - its length or its width?" The simplistic answer, therefore, is that neither one contributes more to a creature's personality; rather, that it's some interdependent combination of
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However I have no idea how that applies to Pokémon.
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And perhaps it would follow, then, that Pokemon raised to fear their trainer will show dramatically different personalities than those raised to love the one commanding them.
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My personal concern is how much of that desire to fight is natural, and how much is instilled from the training we all do.
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You do raise an interesting point, though. At least one member of my roster, for example, seems more interested in pursuing romantic relations with her fellow Pokemon, as opposed to adversarial ones.
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I've bowed to necessity, of course, and I train mine as well as I can. But if any of them seemed opposed to battling, I wouldn't force them into it.
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What happens, then, to all those skilled, trained, high-level creatures left without a master? Some are adopted by others, of course, but it still seems there ought to be a surplus of dangerously strong Pokemon around - and as far as I can tell, there isn't.
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If you don't mind the inquiry, I'd be interested to hear more about your 'product of stories' model of the issue. Does that imply that individuals are ultimately just players in a greater predetermined scheme?
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Similarly, if our task is as ambitious as analyzing life in all of its complexity, then there is a whole multitude, if not an infinity of factors that become relevant and should be taken into consideration.
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Predisposition, on the other hand, might be something of a murkier consideration.
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