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Excerpt from Biosocial Nature of Man
Aristotle described man as a political animal, thus hitting off in a phrase his essential characteristics, namely, that he is at once an animal and a social crea ture in a rather special sense - a biosocial creature. All animals are social creatures, that is they are both liv ing organisms and interact with each other to confer mutually beneficial advantages upon one another, but man as an animal and as a social creature is unique in several respects. As an animal, man is the most plastic, the most adaptable, the most educable, of all living creatures. Indeed, the single trait which is alone sufficient to distinguish man from all other creatures is the quality of educability - it is the species character of Homo sapiens.
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