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Reviews for The Nature of the Child

 The Nature of the Child magazine reviews

The average rating for The Nature of the Child based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-11-17 00:00:00
1994was given a rating of 4 stars Brian Engle
In the epilogue to his "The Nature of the Child," psychologist Jerome Kagan writes that ". . .the central theme hidden in and between the chapters of this book is that the person's interpretation of experience is simultaneously the most significant product of an encounter and the spur to the next." These interpretations can be manifest as schemas--a schema is ". . .a representation of experience that bears a relation to an original event" (categories, propositions, etc.). There are implications here for continuity and change in the understanding that people have of themselves and their worlds. Kagan contends that biology (e.g., the maturation of the central nervous system) and experience shape the development of children's psychological qualities and cognition. As children move into adolescence, experience becomes the dominant force. The interaction between biology and experience, Kagan insists, militates against the likelihood that the child's schemata and personal characteristics (e.g., aggressiveness) will have any necessary relationship to that child's adolescent and adult views. Put simply, early and middle childhood beliefs do not predict the views that an adult will hold. Biology provides one important part of the explanation. Biologists find that as one stage of development is left behind, its underlying structures may simply disappear and, hence, not be a part of new structures (e.g., certain sensory cells simply cease existence with the metamorphosis of the tadpole). Just so with psychological development. To illustrate, Kagan takes "separation anxiety" among one-year olds. Many psychologists treat this as a harbinger of probable later adult problems. In Kagan's view, this anxiety may be temporarily adaptive, but has no necessary future function or importance. In a survey of longitudinal studies, Kagan reports that ". . .long-term preservation [of various psychological entities:] is minimal until late childhood." Admittedly, there does appear to be some continuity in psychological entities from late childhood (6 to 10 years of age), and, by itself, this would seem to be compatible with the primacy principle. Kagan explains the carryover in situational or structural--but not psychological--terms. That is, if the situations in which people find themselves remain reasonably constant as they move through the different stages of development, there is likely to be continuity. On the other hand, ". . .the evidence does imply that if the profiles created by early encounters are not supported by future and current environments, change is likely." Available data are supportive of Kagan's analysis. One of the most dramatic instances of this concerns individuals' personalities, normally assumed to be resistant to alteration. Moss and Susman survey a series of longitudinal studies of personality development and, in line with Kagan's argument, find that "Consistency is most obvious for personality characteristics that are endowed with positive cultural and societal valences." Supporting situations account better for stability than some unchanging internal mechanism standing alone. All in all, a well written and important book that raises questions about the extent to which one stage on our lives affects subsequent stages. Well worth looking at.
Review # 2 was written on 2015-02-15 00:00:00
1994was given a rating of 5 stars Paul Balfour
This book will always be a classic and will never let you down (when it comes to neural networks, that is).


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