Children's Causal Explanations of Animate and Inanimate Motion

Adults frequently refer to nonobvious, internal, or immanent causal mechanisms when explaining certain kinds of movement-such as the movement of animals (e. g., a rabbit hops because of its brain and muscles) and the self-sustained movement of artifacts (e. g., a toy moves on its own because of batt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Child development 1996-10, Vol.67 (5), p.1970-1987
Hauptverfasser: Gelman, Susan A., Gottfried, Gail M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Adults frequently refer to nonobvious, internal, or immanent causal mechanisms when explaining certain kinds of movement-such as the movement of animals (e. g., a rabbit hops because of its brain and muscles) and the self-sustained movement of artifacts (e. g., a toy moves on its own because of batteries or gears). This series of studies examined whether and when preschool children are willing to attribute internal and immanent causes to motion. In 3 studies, preschool children and adults viewed animals and artifacts (wind-up toys and transparent objects) either moving independently or being transported by a person. Children explained animal and artifact events differently, even with the kind of movement controlled: They were more likely to attribute immanent cause to animals than to artifacts and more likely to attribute human cause to artifacts than animals. Internal causes were less frequently endorsed overall; however, when asked to describe the insides of artifacts, children who saw them moving alone more often described internal mechanisms (e. g., batteries, electricity) than children who did not see them moving alone. Altogether, the studies suggest that children as young as 3 or 4 years of age honor two principles: For animals more than for artifacts, movement is caused by an immanent source, and across domains, movements without an observable agent have an internal or immanent source.
ISSN:0009-3920
1467-8624
DOI:10.2307/1131604