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Children’s Understanding of Identity - The Kind of Referent That Children Have in Mind When Understanding Identity Arguments

Received: Mar. 26, 2020    Accepted: May 12, 2020    Published: May 27, 2020
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Abstract

In order to conduct the reader to several important features of the old concept of identity we use a dialogue between two brothers of age 14 and 10 (ch.2). These boys point to important problems for children’s understanding identity. These are, for example, children’s ability to use two different names for one object (referent) or how to understand that the same referent is described by different properties (morning/evening star problem) or how can the referent of a name (name of their grandmother) be identical with the referent of a description (woman living 2nd floor, door 13) etc. Such identity situations occur in the test with children described in ch.6. After some preliminaries concerning the used language (ch.3) we offer a classification of identity-statements (ch.4) since several forms of these are used in the identity test (ch.6). Chapter 5 is a detailed study of different types of referents which are used when children understand identity: thought-referent, discourse-referent, perspective-referent are the most important ones. The last - perspective-referent - has many ramifications because of the different types of “perspective”. The last chapter describes an experimental test that has been done with 62 children of age between 3 and 4 years. The test included two identity stories accompanied by two preceding control stories. The result of the tests are as follows: 1. The correlation between age and the solution of the identity tasks is significant. 2. There is a significant difference between 3-years old and 4-years old children concerning both the identity tasks and that of the false belief task. 3. There is a significant correlation between the solution of the identity tasks and the false belief task. Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Josef Perner for several valuable remarks.

DOI 10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12
Published in Humanities and Social Sciences ( Volume 8, Issue 2, March 2020 )
Page(s) 51-62
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Identity, Reference, Classification of Identity-Statements, False-Belief-Task

References
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    Paul Weingartner, Silvia Haring. (2020). Children’s Understanding of Identity - The Kind of Referent That Children Have in Mind When Understanding Identity Arguments. Humanities and Social Sciences, 8(2), 51-62. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12

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    Paul Weingartner; Silvia Haring. Children’s Understanding of Identity - The Kind of Referent That Children Have in Mind When Understanding Identity Arguments. Humanit. Soc. Sci. 2020, 8(2), 51-62. doi: 10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12

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    AMA Style

    Paul Weingartner, Silvia Haring. Children’s Understanding of Identity - The Kind of Referent That Children Have in Mind When Understanding Identity Arguments. Humanit Soc Sci. 2020;8(2):51-62. doi: 10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12

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  • @article{10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12,
      author = {Paul Weingartner and Silvia Haring},
      title = {Children’s Understanding of Identity - The Kind of Referent That Children Have in Mind When Understanding Identity Arguments},
      journal = {Humanities and Social Sciences},
      volume = {8},
      number = {2},
      pages = {51-62},
      doi = {10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.hss.20200802.12},
      eprint = {https://download.sciencepg.com/pdf/10.11648.j.hss.20200802.12},
      abstract = {In order to conduct the reader to several important features of the old concept of identity we use a dialogue between two brothers of age 14 and 10 (ch.2). These boys point to important problems for children’s understanding identity. These are, for example, children’s ability to use two different names for one object (referent) or how to understand that the same referent is described by different properties (morning/evening star problem) or how can the referent of a name (name of their grandmother) be identical with the referent of a description (woman living 2nd floor, door 13) etc. Such identity situations occur in the test with children described in ch.6. After some preliminaries concerning the used language (ch.3) we offer a classification of identity-statements (ch.4) since several forms of these are used in the identity test (ch.6). Chapter 5 is a detailed study of different types of referents which are used when children understand identity: thought-referent, discourse-referent, perspective-referent are the most important ones. The last - perspective-referent - has many ramifications because of the different types of “perspective”. The last chapter describes an experimental test that has been done with 62 children of age between 3 and 4 years. The test included two identity stories accompanied by two preceding control stories. The result of the tests are as follows: 1. The correlation between age and the solution of the identity tasks is significant. 2. There is a significant difference between 3-years old and 4-years old children concerning both the identity tasks and that of the false belief task. 3. There is a significant correlation between the solution of the identity tasks and the false belief task. Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Josef Perner for several valuable remarks.},
     year = {2020}
    }
    

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    AU  - Paul Weingartner
    AU  - Silvia Haring
    Y1  - 2020/05/27
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    AB  - In order to conduct the reader to several important features of the old concept of identity we use a dialogue between two brothers of age 14 and 10 (ch.2). These boys point to important problems for children’s understanding identity. These are, for example, children’s ability to use two different names for one object (referent) or how to understand that the same referent is described by different properties (morning/evening star problem) or how can the referent of a name (name of their grandmother) be identical with the referent of a description (woman living 2nd floor, door 13) etc. Such identity situations occur in the test with children described in ch.6. After some preliminaries concerning the used language (ch.3) we offer a classification of identity-statements (ch.4) since several forms of these are used in the identity test (ch.6). Chapter 5 is a detailed study of different types of referents which are used when children understand identity: thought-referent, discourse-referent, perspective-referent are the most important ones. The last - perspective-referent - has many ramifications because of the different types of “perspective”. The last chapter describes an experimental test that has been done with 62 children of age between 3 and 4 years. The test included two identity stories accompanied by two preceding control stories. The result of the tests are as follows: 1. The correlation between age and the solution of the identity tasks is significant. 2. There is a significant difference between 3-years old and 4-years old children concerning both the identity tasks and that of the false belief task. 3. There is a significant correlation between the solution of the identity tasks and the false belief task. Acknowledgement: We would like to thank Josef Perner for several valuable remarks.
    VL  - 8
    IS  - 2
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Author Information
  • Department of Philosophy, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria

  • University Library, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria

  • Section