91. Why are there arguments about this? 92. The argument was that different components of personality are built up in particular individuals as a consequence of cultural conditioning. 93. His argument was that miners were abusing their personal fuel allowance by removing large amounts to sell. 94. Rather, the argument was that industrialism was giving rise to new, and massive, urban concentrations and these latter were having distinct social effects. 95. Our argument here is that it does not. 96. There is firstly, however, the question of whether the sociobiological arguments are correct even on their own terms. 97. Our central argument here will be that existing work fails adequately to consider people as active human beings. 98. Our argument is that this type of politics has a strong basis in instincts and emotion as well as in political economy. 99. But this argument is far from conclusive. 100. My argument is that statecentrism, whether in its directly state-centrist form or in indirect forms, takes us quite far but not far enough. |