Children and adults are different forms of Homo Sapiens
21 February, 2011
"Children and adults are different
forms of Homo Sapiens"
Alison Gopnik
Professor
Alison Gopnik believes many profound questions about
human
nature can be answered by thinking about
children.
A leading psychologist and philosopher - and
mother of three - Gopnik
will present a Sydney Ideas
at the
University of Sydney on 24 February on the
groundbreaking
developments in psychology, neuroscience
and philosophy which are
revolutionising our
understanding of how very young children see
the
world.
She uses scientific evidence, including from
her Berkeley laboratory, to
explain how research is
transforming our perceptions of young children,
parenting
and ourselves.
Her talk is based on her book, The
Philosophical Baby: What Children's
Minds Tell Us About
Truth, Love and the Meaning of Life.
Gopnik says, "Human
beings have a longer childhood than any other animal
-
our children are more helpless and dependent than any
others."
"I'll show that childhood - our long period of
helplessness - is
responsible for our uniquely human
consciousness and our ability to
learn, imagine and
love.
"Our research shows that even the youngest babies
have learning
abilities that are more powerful than those
of the smartest scientists
and most advanced
computers.
"Toddlers already analyse statistics and do
experiments. In their
unstoppable pretend play,
preschoolers also use their discoveries to
imagine new
ways that the world might be.
"Children not only learn
about the world around them, they also learn
about other
people and themselves. By the time they are three or
four
they understand love and morality.
"These
remarkable learning abilities reflect special features of
babies'
brains, features that may actually make babies
more conscious than
adults."
Professor Alison Gopnik is
a professor of psychology and affiliate
professor of
philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley.
She
is an internationally recognised leader in the study
of children's
learning and development and was the first
to argue that children's
minds could help us understand
deep philosophical questions.
She is the author of over
100 journal articles and several books
including the
bestselling The Scientist in the Crib (co-authored).
She
has also written widely about cognitive science and
psychology for
Science, The Times Literary Supplement,
The New York Review of Books,
The New York Times, New
Scientist and Slate.
Event Details:
What: The
Philosophical Baby: What Children's Minds Tell Us About
Truth
Love and the Meaning of Life - Sydney Ideas lecture
at the University of
Sydney.
When: Thursday, 24 February, 2011 at 6pm
Where: Law School Foyer, Eastern Avenue, the University of Sydney,
Cost: Free event, no booking or registration required.
ENDS