Psychological essentialism is the idea that certain categories, such as male" or "wealthy," are defined by underlying, innate, and non-obvious features. In other words, essentialist reasoning posits that someone is born with a particular quality, that they will always possess the quality, and that it may be used to categorize the individual. Our study will focus on wealth, specifically the qualities of richness and poorness, and assess the degree to which adults and children alike think about these characteristics. Being able to reliably essentialize certain qualities may be helpful in constructing categories and predicting characteristics of novel concepts or objects. That said, essentialist reasoning about people may be conducive to harmf...
Psychological essentialism is a prominent view within contemporary developmental psychology and cogn...
Psychological essentialism refers to the widespread belief that entities, such as kinds of animals o...
Many studies appear to show that categorization conforms to psychological essentialism (e.g., Gelman...
Essentialism is the belief that certain characteristics (of individuals or categories) may be relati...
Children and adults view many characteristics in an essentialist way—as innate, immutable, and biolo...
Essentialist thinking entails belief that certain social groups have intrinsic immutable characteris...
Data from Study 3 in a series of studies investigating whether participants view goodness and badnes...
Psychological essentialism is the concept, that an individual holds a specific assumption about the ...
Psychological essentialism is the widespread belief that members of natural and social categories sh...
Research on implicit person theories shows that people who believe that human attributes are immutab...
Kantian theories of morality focus on the universal application of moral rules. However, both childr...
Two studies examine implicit theories about the nature of personality characteristics, asking whethe...
Recent work on children’s inferences concerning biological and chemical categories has suggested tha...
A longstanding empirical question is how children classify people into meaningful social categories....
Essentialism is the tendency to believe members of a category share an underlying essence that predi...
Psychological essentialism is a prominent view within contemporary developmental psychology and cogn...
Psychological essentialism refers to the widespread belief that entities, such as kinds of animals o...
Many studies appear to show that categorization conforms to psychological essentialism (e.g., Gelman...
Essentialism is the belief that certain characteristics (of individuals or categories) may be relati...
Children and adults view many characteristics in an essentialist way—as innate, immutable, and biolo...
Essentialist thinking entails belief that certain social groups have intrinsic immutable characteris...
Data from Study 3 in a series of studies investigating whether participants view goodness and badnes...
Psychological essentialism is the concept, that an individual holds a specific assumption about the ...
Psychological essentialism is the widespread belief that members of natural and social categories sh...
Research on implicit person theories shows that people who believe that human attributes are immutab...
Kantian theories of morality focus on the universal application of moral rules. However, both childr...
Two studies examine implicit theories about the nature of personality characteristics, asking whethe...
Recent work on children’s inferences concerning biological and chemical categories has suggested tha...
A longstanding empirical question is how children classify people into meaningful social categories....
Essentialism is the tendency to believe members of a category share an underlying essence that predi...
Psychological essentialism is a prominent view within contemporary developmental psychology and cogn...
Psychological essentialism refers to the widespread belief that entities, such as kinds of animals o...
Many studies appear to show that categorization conforms to psychological essentialism (e.g., Gelman...