The influence of linguistic form and causal explanations on the development of social essentialism

2022 
Generic descriptions of social categories (e.g., play baseball; have long hair) lead children and adults to think of the referenced categories (i.e., boys and girls) in terms—as natural ways of dividing up the world. Yet, key questions remain unanswered about and generic language shapes the development of essentialist beliefs. The present experiment examined the scope of these effects by testing the extent to which generics elicit essentialist beliefs because of their linguistic form or because of the causal information they convey. Generic language led children ( = 199, = 6.07 years, range = 4.5–7.95) to essentialize a novel social category, regardless of the causal information used to describe category-property relations (either biological or cultural). In contrast, both linguistic form and causal information influenced adults' ( = 234) beliefs. These findings reveal a unique role of linguistic form in the development and communication of essentialist beliefs in young children.
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