Tag: Jean Piaget


OBJECT PERMANENCE

The Fundamental Nature of Object Permanence The concept of object permanence serves as a fundamental pillar within the field of developmental psychology, representing the cognitive realization that physical entities continue to exist even when they are no longer within the immediate field of sensory perception. This psychological milestone marks a significant transition in human development, […]

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SECONDARY CIRCULAR REACTION

Theoretical Foundations of Secondary Circular Reactions The concept of the secondary circular reaction serves as a cornerstone in the study of early childhood development, specifically within the domain of cognitive psychology. This phenomenon represents a pivotal shift in an infant’s interaction with the world, marking the transition from self-focused behaviors to environment-focused explorations. In the […]

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TOPOLOGY

Introduction and Definition of Topology Topology, fundamentally defined as the analysis of geometric shapes and their transformations in space, examines the properties of figures that remain invariant under continuous deformations, such as stretching, bending, or twisting, but not tearing or gluing. Unlike traditional Euclidean geometry, which focuses on rigid metrics like distance and angle, topology […]

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LITERALISM

Definition and Foundational Concepts Literalism, in the field of psychology, refers to the strict and often rigid adherence to the observable phenomena or explicit facts available within a given situation, neglecting any inferred, figurative, or contextual meaning. This cognitive tendency mandates that interpretation must not exceed the boundaries of what is immediately demonstrable or explicitly […]

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PRECAUSAL THINKING

Definition and Core Concepts of Precausal Thinking Precausal thinking represents a fundamental mode of cognitive processing observed primarily during the early stages of childhood development, characterized by the propensity of a young individual to interpret natural occurrences, such as the movements of clouds, the force of the wind, or the descent of rain, through the […]

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PIAGET, JEAN

Introduction and Early Life Jean Piaget, a seminal figure in the fields of child psychology and epistemology, was a Swiss researcher whose groundbreaking work redefined the understanding of how children acquire knowledge. Born in Neuchâtel in 1896, Piaget’s academic journey began not in psychology, but in the natural sciences. His early fascination with biology, specifically […]

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ARTIFICIALISM

ARTIFICIALISM: Introduction and Definition Artificialism, a key concept developed by the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget during his foundational research on childhood cognition, defines a specific mode of causal reasoning observed predominantly in the preoperational stage of development. Fundamentally, artificialism is the assumption that anything that exists in the world, particularly natural phenomena, must have been […]

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ADAPTATION MECHANISM

ADAPTATION MECHANISM: Foundations in Cognitive Theory The concept of the Adaptation Mechanism is foundational to the constructivist theory of cognitive development, primarily articulated by the Swiss psychologist, Jean Piaget. This mechanism describes the essential, continuous process through which an organism, whether biological or psychological, interacts with its environment to achieve a state of intellectual equilibrium. […]

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PHENOMENISTIC CAUSALITY

Defining Phenomenistic Causality Phenomenistic causality, within the framework of developmental psychology pioneered by Jean Piaget, describes a primitive form of causal reasoning wherein an individual, typically a young child, establishes a link between two occurrences based solely on their observed proximity in space or time. This inference is fundamentally flawed because it ignores the actual […]

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MORALITY OF COOPERATION

Introduction to the Morality of Cooperation The concept of the Morality of Cooperation represents a pivotal achievement in the development of human ethical reasoning, first meticulously outlined by the renowned Swiss psychologist, Jean Piaget, primarily in his seminal 1932 work, The Moral Judgment of the Child. This specific moral structure typically characterizes the thinking of […]

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PREDICATE THINKING

Introduction and Definitional Framework Predicate thinking refers to a specific, fundamental procedure of thought characterized by the tendency to equate two or more distinct items, objects, or concepts solely on the basis that they share a single, isolated trait or characteristic. This form of reasoning operates on the premise that if A possesses quality X, […]

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