The Essential Child
Top Cited Papers
- 8 May 2003
- book
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP)
Abstract
Essentialism is the idea that certain categories, such as “dog,” “man,” or “intelligence,” have an underlying reality or true nature that gives objects their identity. This book argues that essentialism is an early cognitive bias. Young children's concepts reflect a deep commitment to essentialism, and this commitment leads children to look beyond the obvious in many converging ways: when learning words, generalizing knowledge to new category members, reasoning about the insides of things, contemplating the role of nature versus nurture, and constructing causal explanations. This book argues against the standard view of children as concrete or focused on the obvious, instead claiming that children have an early, powerful tendency to search for hidden, non-obvious features of things. It also disputes claims that children build up their knowledge of the world based on simple, associative learning strategies, arguing that children's concepts are embedded in rich folk theories. Parents don't explicitly teach children to essentialize; instead, during the preschool years, children spontaneously construct concepts and beliefs that reflect an essentialist bias. The book synthesizes over fifteen years of empirical research on essentialism into a unified framework and explores the broader lessons that the research imparts concerning, among other things, human concepts, children's thinking, and the ways in which language influences thought.Keywords
This publication has 406 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diversity-Based Reasoning in ChildrenCognitive Psychology, 2001
- Studies in Inductive Inference in InfancyCognitive Psychology, 1998
- What do children know about the universal quantifiers all and each?Cognition, 1996
- Essentialism, word use, and conceptsCognition, 1996
- An abstract to concrete shift in the development of biological thought: the insides storyCognition, 1995
- Do children have a theory of race?Cognition, 1995
- Early beliefs about the cause of illness: Evidence against immanent justiceCognitive Development, 1992
- Perception, ontology, and word meaningCognition, 1992
- Perception, ontology, and naming in young children: Commentary on Soja, Carey, and SpelkeCognition, 1992
- Will the real grandmother please stand up? The psychological reality of dual meaning representationsJournal of Psycholinguistic Research, 1982