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Beyond belief-desire psychology: Exploring early culture-mindedness through counterfactual questions

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Humans are social beings, wired to connect with and also to get to know and understand each other. For this we are well equip, from early in life, with a generally applicable causal theory of agents and actions. This "theory of mind" helps us understand that mental states - intentions, goals, desires, beliefs, knowledge, and emotions - drive behavior, and that these states of mind are linked with, but importantly separate from, the states of the world outside the mind. Much evidence suggests that, despite differences in language, executive functioning, and socialization practices, the time course of theory of mind development is largely stable across cultures. But there are well-documented cultural differences beyond early childhood in a host of social-cognitive understandings which relate to our early theory of mind. Do we need a separate framework for accounting for these later developments? In this talk, I will argue that we do not. The argument rests on a fundamental property of causation and causal inference, which is that causal and counterfactual reasoning are intimately connected (Lewis, 1986; also Pearl, 2000; Woodward & Hitchcock, 2003). This connection leads to a set of theoretical claims about our earliest causal representations of human action (that they support counterfactual inference, even in infancy) and can help clarify where cultural information fits into these representations. For the remainder of the talk, I will focus on the methodological possibilities suggested by this theoretical claim: namely, that asking children about alternative possible actions reveals a broad explanatory framework, beyond belief-desire psychology, in which cultural knowledge plays an important role. This framework has potential for unifying several areas of research related to social cognition, self-awareness, and self-regulation.

Referent

Tamar Kushnir (Cornell University)

Journey Description

Map

E - Main Entrance/Reception
1 - Managing Board; sections: Infection Biology Unit, Unit of Infection Models, Laboratory Animal Science Unit, Primate Genetics Laboratory, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Unit, Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, Neurobiology Laboratory, Research Coordination, Public Relations, Information Technology, Administration, Technical Support, Library.
2 - Material Delivery/Purchase
3 - Platform Degenerative Diseases
4 - Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory
5 - Animal Husbandry
6 - Imaging Center, Functional Imaging Laboratory


Arrival by car

Leave the interstate A7 at exit "Göttingen Nord". Follow the B27 straight ahead in the direction of "Braunlage". After the third traffic light intersection turn right towards "Kliniken". Afterwards turn left onto "Robert-Koch-Straße" direction "Universität Nordbereich/Polizei". At the end of "Robert-Koch-Straße" turn right onto "Otto-Hahn-Straße", direction "Nikolausberg". The first street on the left turn onto "Kellnerweg", follow the signs "Deutsches Primatenzentrum".


Arrival by bus

The footpath from the bus stop "Kellnerweg" to the Main Entrance/Reception: 
From Bus stop "Kellnerweg" (line 21/22 and 23) Cross the road, go in the direction of the bus. At the mailbox, turn left into the footpath and proceed to the end. Turn right into the Kellnerweg. The main entrance of the DPZ is on the left side.

Date and Time 01.02.17 - 14:30 - 15:30 Signup is not required

Location Hörsaal / Lecture hall
Deutsches Primatenzentrum
Kellnerweg 4
37077 Göttingen

Organiser

RTG 2070 "Understanding Social Relationships"

Contact Dr. Rebecca JürgensRTG 2070 &quot;Understanding Social Relationships&quot;<br />Deutsches Primatenzentrum GmbH<br />Leibniz-Institut für Primatenforschung<br />Kellnerweg 4<br />37077 Göttingen<br />Tel: +49 551 3851-218<br />Fax: +49 551 3851-489<br />E-Mail: <link rtg2070@uni-goettingen.de - - "Mail to RTG 2070">rtg2070@uni-goettingen.de&nbsp;</link><link https://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/509586.html - - "More information on RTG 2070">https://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/509586.html</link>
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