Graduate School of Education, Harvard University
Graduate School of Education, Harvard University.
Perspect Psychol Sci. 2014 Mar;9(2):144-60. doi: 10.1177/1745691613518078.
Recent research shows that even preschoolers are skeptical; they frequently reject claims from other people when the claims conflict with their own perceptions and concepts. Yet, despite their skepticism, both children and adults come to believe in a variety of phenomena that defy their first-hand perceptions and intuitive conceptions of the world. In this review, we explore how children and adults acquire such concepts. We describe how a similar developmental process underlies mental representation of both the natural and the supernatural world, and we detail this process for two prominent supernatural counterintuitive ideas-God and the afterlife. In doing so, we highlight the fact that conceptual development does not always move in the direction of greater empirical truth, as described within naturalistic domains. We consider factors that likely help overcome skepticism and, in doing so, promote belief in counterintuitive phenomena. These factors include qualities of the learners, aspects of the context, qualities of the informants, and qualities of the information.
最近的研究表明,即使是学龄前儿童也持有怀疑态度;当他人的说法与自己的感知和概念相冲突时,他们经常会拒绝这些说法。然而,尽管孩子们持怀疑态度,但他们还是会相信各种违背他们第一手感知和直觉的世界概念的现象。在这篇综述中,我们探讨了儿童和成人是如何获得这些概念的。我们描述了类似的发展过程如何为自然和超自然世界的心理表象提供基础,并详细说明了这一过程对于两个突出的超自然反直觉概念——上帝和来世。这样做的同时,我们强调了一个事实,即概念发展并不总是朝着更符合自然主义领域中描述的经验真理的方向发展。我们考虑了一些可能有助于克服怀疑态度并促进对反直觉现象的信仰的因素。这些因素包括学习者的特质、情境的各个方面、信息提供者的特质以及信息的特质。