Authors
Woo-kyoung Ahn, Eric G Taylor, Daniel Kato, Jessecae K Marsh, Paul Bloom
Publication date
2013/6
Journal
Quarterly journal of experimental psychology
Volume
66
Issue
6
Pages
1113-1130
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
The current study examines causal essentialism, derived from psychological essentialism of concepts. We examine whether people believe that members of a category share some underlying essence that is both necessary and sufficient for category membership and that also causes surface features. The main claim is that causal essentialism is restricted to categories that correspond to our intuitive notions of existing kinds and hence is more attenuated for categories that are based on arbitrary criteria. Experiments 1 and 3 found that people overtly endorse causal essences in nonarbitrary kinds but are less likely to do so for arbitrary categories. Experiments 2 and 4 found that people were more willing to generalize a member's known causal relations (or lack thereof) when dealing with a kind than when dealing with an arbitrary category. These differences between kinds and arbitrary categories were found across …
Total citations
201320142015201620172018201920202021202220231331423141
Scholar articles
W Ahn, EG Taylor, D Kato, JK Marsh, P Bloom - Quarterly journal of experimental psychology, 2013