From a philosophical point of view, all human beings share a set of highly particular and constitutive traits, which include the way of acting, thinking and feeling within the context in which they are handled. There are many theories about what the nature of man means. Philosophers like Plato considered that the essence of man was made up of an immortal soul that can obtain knowledge.
In this sense, Plato believed that the soul was fragmented into three parts: the part that satisfies the wishes and needs of the person. The reasoning part and the part that controls temperament. As can be seen, each of these parts of the soul fulfills a specific performance, however, it is the part of logic or reasoning that should direct human beings.
The truth is that human nature is one that shows the essence of man, that is, how he thinks, behaves, develops personally, physically, in short, that instinct that drives man to want to do things.
Since the human being is born he has a reserved destiny. During his life, man has dedicated himself to investigating and exploring the world in which he lives, always wanting to learn and obtain new knowledge; This is why he always tries to understand everything he reads, observes and listens, to then focus on the search for the truth of everything that exists.
Feelings, dreams and goals are characteristics of human nature, even when they are properties that cannot be touched. However, when the human being begins to evolve in the physical and mental plane, little by little he externalizes some aspects of himself, which most certainly was that he had it since his childhood, but that had not emerged.
The human being spontaneously structures his life, since his desire is to get ahead, progress in many different ways, for example studying, having his own family, obtaining human values, satisfying his needs, carrying out his goals, inventing things new, bond with nature and follow religious principles.