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22 | Do Young Children Care About Others? Searching For The Seeds Of Human Morality ~ Amrisha Vaish

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Manage episode 367668885 series 3403620
Content provided by Ilari Mäkelä. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ilari Mäkelä or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Here is a common view on human development: In the beginning, children can only think about themselves. Slowly, they learn to care about others — or more cynically, they learn to pretend that they care about others. Variations of this view have been promoted by thinkers from Sigmund Freud to Richard Dawkins. This view has then been used to make predictable conclusions about ethics: human morality is either a social construct — fearfully internalized — or a clever tactic, used by selfish individuals to reap the benefits of teamwork.

But what evidence do we actually have about young children’s motivations? Do they genuinely not care about others?

To discuss these questions I have Dr Amrisha Vaish on the show. Vaish is a developmental psychologist at the University of Virginia, famous for her work on pro-social motivations in young children. We discuss issues such as:

  1. How spontaneous is it for young children to help others?
  2. Why do children help others? Do they want praise or do they genuinely care about others?
  3. How early does empathy emerge?
  4. Different forms of empathy; or the subtle difference between matching others’ emotions versus caring about others’ emotios?
  5. What should parents do to help children grow to be more caring?
  6. Neurodiversity and empathy in autism
  7. Is anyone born a psychopath?
  8. Where does mundane cruelty (e.g. to animals) come from?
  9. The difference between sympathy and guilt; and why does the latter emerge later?
  10. What decades of studying young children has taught Vaish about our species

_________

Please consider becoming a supporter of On Humans. Even small monthly donations can make a huge impact on the long-term sustainability of the program.

Visit: Patreon.com/OnHumans

Get in touch: ilari@onhumans.org

_________

Scholars mentioned

Sigmund Freud / Felix Waerneken / Michael Tomasello / Robert Hepach / Joan Grusec / Maayan Davidov / Daniel Batson / Audun Dahl / Celia Brownell / Martin Hoffman / Jan Engelman / Vikram Jaswhwal / Paul Bloom / Peter Singer / Richard Dawkins / Jean Decety / Scott Barry Kaufman / Simon Baron-Cohen

Books mentioned

Altruism in Humans (by Daniel Batson) / The Last Manchu (Memoirs of Emperor Puyi) / Transcend (by Scott Barry Kaufman)

Read more

The books below are curated for those interested in learning more about the topic. Listeners of the On Humans podcast are eligible to get one of them for free as an Audible audiobook.*

  1. Becoming Human (Michael Tomasello)
  2. Just Babies (Paul Bloom)

To get your free book, set up an Audible account via the following link.

https://amzn.to/3qMMshw

You gain one free credit which you can use for a book of your choice.

* Offer is not available for current Audible customers. However, current customers can access Becoming Humans for free via Audible's PLUS catalogue.

  continue reading

59 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 367668885 series 3403620
Content provided by Ilari Mäkelä. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ilari Mäkelä or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Here is a common view on human development: In the beginning, children can only think about themselves. Slowly, they learn to care about others — or more cynically, they learn to pretend that they care about others. Variations of this view have been promoted by thinkers from Sigmund Freud to Richard Dawkins. This view has then been used to make predictable conclusions about ethics: human morality is either a social construct — fearfully internalized — or a clever tactic, used by selfish individuals to reap the benefits of teamwork.

But what evidence do we actually have about young children’s motivations? Do they genuinely not care about others?

To discuss these questions I have Dr Amrisha Vaish on the show. Vaish is a developmental psychologist at the University of Virginia, famous for her work on pro-social motivations in young children. We discuss issues such as:

  1. How spontaneous is it for young children to help others?
  2. Why do children help others? Do they want praise or do they genuinely care about others?
  3. How early does empathy emerge?
  4. Different forms of empathy; or the subtle difference between matching others’ emotions versus caring about others’ emotios?
  5. What should parents do to help children grow to be more caring?
  6. Neurodiversity and empathy in autism
  7. Is anyone born a psychopath?
  8. Where does mundane cruelty (e.g. to animals) come from?
  9. The difference between sympathy and guilt; and why does the latter emerge later?
  10. What decades of studying young children has taught Vaish about our species

_________

Please consider becoming a supporter of On Humans. Even small monthly donations can make a huge impact on the long-term sustainability of the program.

Visit: Patreon.com/OnHumans

Get in touch: ilari@onhumans.org

_________

Scholars mentioned

Sigmund Freud / Felix Waerneken / Michael Tomasello / Robert Hepach / Joan Grusec / Maayan Davidov / Daniel Batson / Audun Dahl / Celia Brownell / Martin Hoffman / Jan Engelman / Vikram Jaswhwal / Paul Bloom / Peter Singer / Richard Dawkins / Jean Decety / Scott Barry Kaufman / Simon Baron-Cohen

Books mentioned

Altruism in Humans (by Daniel Batson) / The Last Manchu (Memoirs of Emperor Puyi) / Transcend (by Scott Barry Kaufman)

Read more

The books below are curated for those interested in learning more about the topic. Listeners of the On Humans podcast are eligible to get one of them for free as an Audible audiobook.*

  1. Becoming Human (Michael Tomasello)
  2. Just Babies (Paul Bloom)

To get your free book, set up an Audible account via the following link.

https://amzn.to/3qMMshw

You gain one free credit which you can use for a book of your choice.

* Offer is not available for current Audible customers. However, current customers can access Becoming Humans for free via Audible's PLUS catalogue.

  continue reading

59 episodes

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