The Developmental and Cultural Origins of Our Beliefs about Self-Control

Autor: Adrienne Wente, Tamar Kushnir, Carissa Kang, Alison Gopnik, Xin Zhao
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Surrounding Self-Control
DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780197500941.003.0003
Popis: Self-control is quite difficult—sometimes people are successful, but frequently they are not. So why do people believe that they can choose, by their own free will, to exercise self-control? This chapter summarizes recent research exploring the cultural and developmental origins of beliefs about self-control and free will. It discusses how two factors contribute to the development of children’s beliefs about self-control: culture and first-person experiences. The authors’ studies of four- to eight-year-old children (N = 441; mean age = 5.96 years; range = 3.92–8.90 years) from China, Singapore, Peru, and the United States indicate that self-control beliefs differ across cultures, and that, comparatively, US children hold intuitions that they can freely choose to exercise self-control. Additionally, evidence indicates that the experience of self-control failure impacts beliefs about free will in US children, but that these experience effects are not culturally universal.
Databáze: OpenAIRE