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Jean Piaget - Father of Child Psychology

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shakand (3 weeks ago) Show Hide
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great i liked to listened his words
tomazzin (6 months ago) Show Hide
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I totally agree with most of what you say. I think, though, that everyone has standards based on personal interpretations. I like to think in continua, I think that everything in the world is continuous. There are social criteria for putting labels on things, as perceptual thresholds, for instance. I don't think of piaget as a genius because I think he was too rigid with his criteria. How many (discrete) concrete operations must I solve in order to be in that particular stage? Who cares, I'm 22.
evenToddlers (6 months ago) Show Hide
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I think he was a genius. I think he gave us the categories but that it is other people that interpret his work too rigidly. He provided the framework for understanding which would lead to the new discipline of Child Psychology.
tomazzin (6 months ago) Show Hide
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(before Vygotsky's work was known worldwide). I agree with my being too rigid, still working on that. Sometimes it's hard to admit other people's genius when you don't agree with their ideas; as when a lot of people disagree with Watson's or Skinner's genius. Yes, he was probably a Genius, still that's a word too rigid with criteria too blurry to determine its proper use.
tomazzin (8 months ago) Show Hide
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Smart guy, I'm not sure if a genius. Geniuses think in continua, not in stages...
ccaldero (6 months ago) Show Hide
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Piaget was probably a genius because he was writing peer-reviewed articles before he could even go to college. Some things cannot be studied as continua (e.g., sometimes we're interested in knowing whether an infant can speak 1 word or zero words, walk or not). There may be underlying processes that can be studied as continua, which may be related to Piaget's stages, but that doesn't diminish the genius of Piaget for realizing that certain cognitive abilities are not present at different ages.
ccaldero (6 months ago) Show Hide
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P.S. You are probably a smart guy too (most people think in terms of categories, not continua), but not a genius, by your own definition. You classify people into genius/not-genius based on categories, not continua ("geniuses think in continua, not in stages...").
crazypianolady (1 year ago) Show Hide
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I agree. A genius.
ladyxeona (1 year ago) Show Hide
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genius.

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