International audienceTesting the reproducibility of an experiment is considered a good practice in science, and the possibility to reproduce an experiment is a condition of its scientificity. We investigate the ability of children to consider a counterintuitive phenomenon as reproducible. The study involved 62 5-year-old children from 4 classes. They were presented with a bottle in which a hole had been pierced and asked if it was possible to stop the water from flowing through the hole without closing it. They were then shown that this result can be obtained by screwing the bottle’s cap. This experiment is counterintuitive enough to be used by some illusionists as a magic trick. It was explained to them that it happens because, since no a...
Magical thinking occurs when supernatural causes, as opposed to rational ones, are assumed in events...
As the history of science has documented, there is an important role for thought experiments in scie...
anomalous phenomena affect ontological causal beliefs in children and adults? Eugene Subbotsky* Lanc...
International audienceTesting the reproducibility of an experiment is considered a good practice in ...
In two experiments (N = 64), we told 6- to 7-year-olds about improbable or impossible outcomes (Expe...
In four experiments, 4-, 5-, 6- and 9-year-old children and adults were tested on the entrenchment o...
The literature has repeatedly shown that children believe in magic and can distinguish between fanta...
In four experiments with 4-, 6- and 9-year-old children and adults the hypothesis was tested that, w...
Past research has shown that children as young as age 3 years are able to distinguish the difference...
The purpose of this paper is to show the magic of physics by showing the physics of magic. What usua...
Conducting scientific experiments with preschoolers can make the difference between a positive and a...
Thinking scientifically is a useful skill to have for everyone. Here, we let children aged 7–15 prac...
Four experiments compared the permanence of imagined and perceived objects. A new method for assessi...
The purpose of this study was to determine whether preschool-aged children use their knowledge of ev...
For millennia, magicians have amazed audiences and developed intuitions about the mind. More recentl...
Magical thinking occurs when supernatural causes, as opposed to rational ones, are assumed in events...
As the history of science has documented, there is an important role for thought experiments in scie...
anomalous phenomena affect ontological causal beliefs in children and adults? Eugene Subbotsky* Lanc...
International audienceTesting the reproducibility of an experiment is considered a good practice in ...
In two experiments (N = 64), we told 6- to 7-year-olds about improbable or impossible outcomes (Expe...
In four experiments, 4-, 5-, 6- and 9-year-old children and adults were tested on the entrenchment o...
The literature has repeatedly shown that children believe in magic and can distinguish between fanta...
In four experiments with 4-, 6- and 9-year-old children and adults the hypothesis was tested that, w...
Past research has shown that children as young as age 3 years are able to distinguish the difference...
The purpose of this paper is to show the magic of physics by showing the physics of magic. What usua...
Conducting scientific experiments with preschoolers can make the difference between a positive and a...
Thinking scientifically is a useful skill to have for everyone. Here, we let children aged 7–15 prac...
Four experiments compared the permanence of imagined and perceived objects. A new method for assessi...
The purpose of this study was to determine whether preschool-aged children use their knowledge of ev...
For millennia, magicians have amazed audiences and developed intuitions about the mind. More recentl...
Magical thinking occurs when supernatural causes, as opposed to rational ones, are assumed in events...
As the history of science has documented, there is an important role for thought experiments in scie...
anomalous phenomena affect ontological causal beliefs in children and adults? Eugene Subbotsky* Lanc...