Lombrozo Tania, Kelemen Deborah, Zaitchik Deborah
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2007 Nov;18(11):999-1006. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.02015.x.
Unlike educated adults, young children demonstrate a "promiscuous" tendency to explain objects and phenomena by reference to functions, endorsing what are called teleological explanations. This tendency becomes more selective as children acquire increasingly coherent beliefs about causal mechanisms, but it is unknown whether a widespread preference for teleology is ever truly outgrown. The study reported here investigated this question by examining explanatory judgments in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), whose dementia affects the rich causal beliefs adults typically consult in evaluating explanations. The results indicate that unlike healthy adults, AD patients systematically and promiscuously prefer teleological explanations, suggesting that an underlying tendency to construe the world in terms of functions persists throughout life. This finding has broad relevance not only to understanding conceptual impairments in AD, but also to theories of development, learning, and conceptual change. Moreover, this finding sheds light on the intuitive appeal of creationism.
与受过教育的成年人不同,幼儿表现出一种“随意”的倾向,即通过提及功能来解释物体和现象,认可所谓的目的论解释。随着儿童对因果机制形成越来越连贯的信念,这种倾向会变得更具选择性,但尚不清楚对目的论的普遍偏好是否真的会随着年龄增长而消失。本文报道的这项研究通过检查阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者的解释性判断来探究这个问题,这些患者的痴呆症会影响成年人在评估解释时通常会参考的丰富因果信念。结果表明,与健康成年人不同,AD患者系统且随意地更倾向于目的论解释,这表明从功能角度理解世界的潜在倾向会伴随一生。这一发现不仅与理解AD中的概念损伤密切相关,还与发展、学习和概念变化理论相关。此外,这一发现揭示了神创论的直观吸引力。