module 8 Flashcards
What is psychological essentialism?
- way of reasoning about the world
- shaped by language (esp. nouns)
- idea that something is what it is b/c of intrinsic, immutable property
- 3 parts
- stability: core consequence of essentialist thinking
- membership/identity fixed at birth:
- highly resistant to change (immutable)
- exterior transformations not relevant
- membership/identity fixed at birth:
What is the 1st part to psychological essentialism?
- ppl believe (intuitively) that certain categories are:
- real; discovered; rooted in nature
- claims about how our psychology leads us to think certain way about objects in the world
What is the 2nd part to psychological essentialism?
- belief that unobservable property causes things to be the way they are
- essence causes observable similarities shared by members of category
- not fooled by surface level changes
What is the 3rd part to psychological essentialism?
- belief that everyday words reflect structure of world
- nouns serve as potential cues to things to be essentialised
- despite surface difference in appearance, still see individuals as members of a kind
How does essentialism relate to social groups?
- essentialism, when applied to human groups, is false
- but still tend to view some groups thru essentialist lens (identity fixed at birth, immutable, indicative of other shared properties)
What is the role of language in shaping psychological essentialism?
one proposal (carrot-eater reading):
if children hear social groups marked w/ noun label, believe that ppl in those groups are deeply different kinds of ppl
- linguistic cues (e.g. noun labels)
- central question: whether children make more essentialist judgments about behaviour in noun label condition vs. verbal predicate condition
- main findings:
- by age 5: personal characteristics (e.g. carrot eating) more stable when referred to by noun vs. verbal predicate
- results consistent for 5 & 7 yr olds
What are the consequences of noun labels?
- noun labels invite child to see it as intrinsic part of identity, outside control to fix/change
- adults & children: noun labels indicate that category:
- supports more inferences
- provides more info about ‘essence’
- is central to identity of object
- is relatively enduring & permanent
- when describing social categories, perpetuate stereotypes & gender
What is minimal group bias?
‘‘minimal’’ group affiliation reading:
- thinking about world in terms of us & them
- key finding: classifying someone as member of in-group, even when pairings are arbitrary, can lead to explicit & implicit bias in favour of in-group and negativity toward out-group