World without weight : perspectives on an alien mind

Bibliographic Collection: 
Anthropogeny, CARTA-Inspired Publication
Publication Type: Book
Authors: Povinelli, D.
Year of Publication: 2011
Publisher: Oxford University Press
City: New York, NY
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 9780198570967
Abstract:

In every domain of reasoning — from time and space, to mental states and physical illness — humans deploy an exceedingly diverse range of intuitive ‘theories’ about how the world works. Children from diverse cultures always seem to arrive at a few, common folk theories as they hone their developing brains against roughly similar interactions with people and objects. The result is an impressive panoply of folk notions that the human species uses to explain, predict, and just plain talk about everything from why the sky is blue, to why we catch a cold when we stand out in the rain. Unquestionably, all of this ‘higher-order’ reasoning rests upon a diverse and complex tool-kit of ‘lower-order’ neural and bodily mechanisms, much of which humans share in common with other species (and which, collectively, are quite clever in their right). But this book asks a different question: Are humans alone in trying to make sense of the world by postulating theoretical entities to explain how the world works? This book approaches this highly controversial territory by investigating the seemingly prosaic topic whether chimpanzees wield roughly the same commonsense ideas about weight that human do. When it comes to the physical world, the chapters ask if chimpanzees reinterpret a broad range of primary experiences — lifting objects, seeing objects fall or collide, observing the differential effort others exert when they move objects — in terms of a common, causal mechanism which, in our everyday parlance, we refer to as ‘weight’. The question is not whether chimpanzees have a theory about weight that's any better or worse than preschool children or Einstein or modern string theorists. The question is whether chimpanzees have any theories at all. And the answer comes in the form of over thirty never-before-published experiments from a decade-long research project involving seven adult chimpanzees and 120 preschool children.

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