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NOTE: the talk is going to be in Oktober Hall! - Ground floor of Oktober 6 street 7.
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From: talks-bounces@cogsci.ceu.edu [mailto:talks-bounces@cogsci.ceu.edu]
On Behalf Of Gyorgyne Finta
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2018 10:37 AM
To: talks@cogsci.ceu.edu (talks@cogsci.ceu.edu) <talks@cogsci.ceu.edu>
Subject: Re: [CEU Cogsci Talks] ``Children's ideas about what can and cannot happen`` a talk by Paul Harris (Graduate School of Education, Harvard University) on Wednesday, July 11, 2018
REMINDER:
Dear all,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to its talk – as part of its Summer University course `Thinking about the Possible` by:
Paul Harris
(Graduate School of Education, Harvard University)
Date: Wednesday, July 11,
2018 – 17:00-18:30
Host: Agnes
Melinda Kovacs
Location: Department
of Cognitive Science, CEU, Oktober 6 street 7, room 101.
Title:
Children's ideas about what can and cannot happen
Young children are often credited with a rich imagination that enables them to enjoy a variety of fantasy worlds. I argue that this portrait is misleading. When children
engage in imaginative play and when they make sense of the pretend actions of a play partner, they routinely invoke their understanding of everyday causal regularities. As such, their pretend play tends to reproduce the familiar, pedestrian routines of everyday
life even it can also be laced with transgression and disruption. I argue that this restriction on pretend worlds also applies to children’s thinking about counterfactual possibilities. Although there is evidence that young children are able to think about
how reality might have turned out otherwise, I will argue that children invoke only modest departures from what actually happened – departures that typically fall within the range of everyday causality. I will also explore a potentially powerful objection
to this insistence on the pedestrian and reality-bound nature of children’s imagination. Children are receptive to religious and fictional narratives in which miraculous or magical events occur. Since these events do depart from ordinary reality, the implication
is that children enjoy a fertile imagination. However, I will present evidence that children’s receptivity is quite dependent on input from the surrounding culture. Thus, although children’s imagination can be fed, and arguably enriched, by religious and fictional
narratives, they are not prone to generate such narratives autonomously. Finally, I will discuss the extent to which this somewhat withholding portrait of children’s imagination can be extended to that of adults.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Cognitive Science Events at CEU: http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/events
Györgyné Finta (Réka)
Department Coordinator
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Central European University
Department of Cognitive Science
H-1051 Budapest
Oktober 6 utca 7.
tel: (36-1) 887-5138
fax: (36-1) 887-5010
http://www.ceu.edu
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu