probing the cultural constitution of causal cognition—a research program
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2016
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Abstract
To what extent is the way people perceive, represent, and reason about causal relationships dependent on culture? While there have been sporadic attempts to explore this question, a systematic investigation is still lacking. Here, we propose that human causal cognition is not only superficially affected by cultural background, but that it is co-constituted by the cultural nature of the human species. To this end, we take stock of on-going research, with a particular focus on the methodological approaches taken: cross-species comparisons, archaeological accounts, developmental studies, cross-cultural and cross-linguistic experiments, as well as in-depth within-culture analyses of cognitive concepts, processes, and changes over time. We argue that only a combination of these approaches will allow us to integrate different components of cognition, levels of analysis, and points of view—the key requirements for a comprehensive, interdisciplinary research program to advance this field.Reference Key |
ebender2016frontiersprobing
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Authors | ;Andrea eBender;Sieghard eBeller |
Journal | accounts of chemical research |
Year | 2016 |
DOI | 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00245 |
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