module 8 Flashcards

1
Q

What is psychological essentialism?

A
  • 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
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2
Q

What is the 1st part to psychological essentialism?

A
  1. 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
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3
Q

What is the 2nd part to psychological essentialism?

A
  1. 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
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4
Q

What is the 3rd part to psychological essentialism?

A
  1. 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
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5
Q

How does essentialism relate to social groups?

A
  • 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)
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6
Q

What is the role of language in shaping psychological essentialism?

A

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:
    1. by age 5: personal characteristics (e.g. carrot eating) more stable when referred to by noun vs. verbal predicate
    2. results consistent for 5 & 7 yr olds
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7
Q

What are the consequences of noun labels?

A
  • 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
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8
Q

What is minimal group bias?

A

‘‘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
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