Piaget, Evolution, and Development

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Ape
apes
Bedouin Women
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Category=JMR
Category=PSAJ
cognition
Cognitive Evolution
Common Chimpanzees
comparative cognitive development models
cultural transmission research
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Genetic Epistemology
great
Great Apes
human
imitation in primates
imitative
Imitative Learning
infants
Invisible Displacement
learning
Lifetime Reproductive Success
logico
Logico Mathematical Cognition
mathematical
Mental Evolution
mindreading system
Nonhuman Primates
Numerosity Perception
object knowledge development
Object Permanence
Offset Ages
phylogenetic analysis
Postconflict Reconciliation
Pretend Play
Primate Phylogenies
Reflective Abstraction
self-awareness evolution
Sense Making
Target Screen
Terminal Addition
Terminal Extension
True Imitation
waal

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805822106
  • Weight: 703g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 1998
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Based on the 25th Anniversary Symposium of the Jean Piaget Society, this book represents cutting-edge work on the mechanisms of cognitive, social, and cultural development. The authors-anthropologists, biologists, historians of science, paleontologists, and psychologists-believe that a rebirth is in progress relating to the study of these mental developments. This volume seeks to illuminate this rebirth.

The varied findings and approaches reported reveal that contemporary comparative research on mental development is in a phase of differentiation and integration. Far from being global and fused, this comparative study is a flowering field of diverse disciplinary approaches, empirical phenomena, scholarly topics, and theoretical perspectives. It focuses on the comparative phylogeny, ontogeny, and history of mentation-most notably on the comparative onset and offset ages, velocity, extent, sequencing, organization of thought, symbol, and value development. The world's leading authorities on the subject discuss the implications of the study of evolution for our models of the ontogenetic origins, development, and history of mentation, as well as determine the constraints that evolution imposes on mental development.

Bringing the current interest in primate cognition to bear on studies of cognitive development in humans, this book will be of interest cognitive developmentalists, primatologists and comparitive psychologists.