"It's Human Nature..."

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
What does this really mean and what significance does it have to you when people use it as an excuse for something?
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
I think it's a scapegoat. People use it for an excuse not to change something.

It's human nature? So what. What reasons exist for something to resist change just because it's human nature?

"War is human nature", "wanting to worship something is human nature"..

So what. That's not actually a reason, it's the absence of a legitimate reason.
 

Farfenugen

Well-Known Member
There is no reasoning with an unreasonable man even if his reasons for a reasonable reasoning go against the very reason that a reasonable man considers reasoning.
 

Grumpy'

Active Member
There is no reasoning with an unreasonable man even if his reasons for a reasonable reasoning go against the very reason that a reasonable man considers reasoning.
Had to rep ya. I actually completely understand what you wrote.
 

eye exaggerate

Well-Known Member
There is no reasoning with an unreasonable man even if his reasons for a reasonable reasoning go against the very reason that a reasonable man considers reasoning.
...you forgot the person who has even greater reasoning than you who looks upon your reasoning the same way that you look upon the reasoning of the person you'd consider unreasonable.
 
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