The study of social cognition involves the attribution of states of mind to humans, as well as, quite recently, to nonhuman creatures, like God. Some studies support the role of social cognition in religious beliefs, whereas others ascribe religious beliefs to an ontological knowledge bias. The present study compares these distinct approaches in 37 catholic children aged 4 to 10 years, who were administered an adapted version of the unexpected content task assessing false beliefs of different agents: a human, a dog, a robot, and God. The children were also administered an intentionality understanding task, a component of mentalization abilities, and an interview on ontological knowledge assessing emotions, intentions, imagination, and epist...
Psychological research suggests that children acquire cultural concepts through early developing cog...
Psychological research suggests that children acquire cultural concepts through early developing cog...
Several theory-of-mind (ToM) studies have explored how children differentiate ordinary minds (humans...
Adults conceptualize God as particularly knowledgeable—more knowledgeable than humans—about moral tr...
The capacity to attribute beliefs to others in order to understand action is one of the mainstays of...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
Adults conceptualize God as particularly knowledgeable—more knowledgeable than humans—about moral tr...
The capacity to attribute beliefs to others in order to understand action is one of the mainstays of...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
The capacity to attribute beliefs to others in order to understand action is one of the mainstays of...
Little research exists on how children understand the actions of nonhuman agents. Researchers often ...
Little research exists on how children understand the actions of nonhuman agents. Researchers often ...
There have been major developments in the understanding of children’s nonhuman concepts, particularl...
Psychological research suggests that children acquire cultural concepts through early developing cog...
Psychological research suggests that children acquire cultural concepts through early developing cog...
Several theory-of-mind (ToM) studies have explored how children differentiate ordinary minds (humans...
Adults conceptualize God as particularly knowledgeable—more knowledgeable than humans—about moral tr...
The capacity to attribute beliefs to others in order to understand action is one of the mainstays of...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
Adults conceptualize God as particularly knowledgeable—more knowledgeable than humans—about moral tr...
The capacity to attribute beliefs to others in order to understand action is one of the mainstays of...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
Revision of paper presented to the annual meeting of The Society for the Scientific Study of Religio...
The capacity to attribute beliefs to others in order to understand action is one of the mainstays of...
Little research exists on how children understand the actions of nonhuman agents. Researchers often ...
Little research exists on how children understand the actions of nonhuman agents. Researchers often ...
There have been major developments in the understanding of children’s nonhuman concepts, particularl...
Psychological research suggests that children acquire cultural concepts through early developing cog...
Psychological research suggests that children acquire cultural concepts through early developing cog...
Several theory-of-mind (ToM) studies have explored how children differentiate ordinary minds (humans...