Strevens M
Philosophy Department, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305- 2155, USA.
Cognition. 2000 Feb 14;74(2):149-75. doi: 10.1016/s0010-0277(99)00071-2.
Recent work on children's inferences concerning biological and chemical categories has suggested that children (and perhaps adults) are essentialists - a view known as psychological essentialism. I distinguish three varieties of psychological essentialism and investigate the ways in which essentialism explains the inferences for which it is supposed to account. Essentialism succeeds in explaining the inferences, I argue, because it attributes to the child belief in causal laws connecting category membership and the possession of certain characteristic appearances and behavior. This suggests that the data will be equally well explained by a non-essentialist hypothesis that attributes belief in the appropriate causal laws to the child, but makes no claim as to whether or not the child represents essences. I provide several reasons to think that this non-essentialist hypothesis is in fact superior to any version of the essentialist hypothesis.
近期关于儿童对生物和化学类别进行推理的研究表明,儿童(或许还有成年人)是本质主义者——这一观点被称为心理本质主义。我区分了心理本质主义的三种变体,并探究了本质主义用以解释其理应说明的推理的方式。我认为,本质主义成功地解释了这些推理,因为它赋予儿童这样一种信念,即存在将类别归属与拥有某些特定特征的外表及行为联系起来的因果律。这表明,一个非本质主义假设同样能很好地解释这些数据,该假设赋予儿童对适当因果律的信念,但并不声称儿童是否表征了本质。我给出了几个理由,认为这个非本质主义假设实际上优于本质主义假设的任何版本。