Children's understanding of human and super-natural mind |
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Authors: | Nikos Makris Dimitris Pnevmatikos |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Primary Education, Democritus University of Thrace, Nea Chili, Alexandroupolis 68100, Greece;2. Department of Primary Education, University of Western Macedonia, Florina, Greece |
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Abstract: | Barrett, Richert, and Driesenga [Barrett, J. L., Richert, R. A., & Driesenga, A. (2001). God's beliefs versus mother's: The development of nonhuman agents concepts. Child Development, 72(1), 50–65] have suggested that children are able to conceptualize the representational properties held by certain super-natural entities, such as God, before they achieve representational understanding of the human mind. The two experimental conditions of the present study aimed at cross-checking the above suggestion. One hundred and twenty children aged from 3 to 7 years were involved in both conditions. In the first, a modified perspective-taking and appearance-reality task, similar to that adopted in Barrett et al.'s study, was used. The task in the second addressed another aspect of representational understanding of the human mind, that is, the early emerging of the rule that knowledge is constrained by perception. The results of the study showed that younger children systematically treat God as a human protagonist regarding the representational properties they possess. Moreover, it was found that children are able to reason, accurately, about God's representational properties, only upon reaching their 5th year of age, when their representational understanding of the human mind becomes stable and robust. |
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Keywords: | Anthropomorphism Representational properties Super-natural entities Theory of mind |
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