Gopnik, Alison : University of California at Berkeley
Alison Gopnik, Ph.D. is a professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley and a leading
cognitive scientist. She is past president of the Society for Philosophy and Psychology and is the author of more
than seventy papers on philosophy, psychology, and children's early learning. She has also written for The New
York Review of Books and The Times Literary Supplement. Mother of three, she lives with her family in Berkeley,
California.
Meltzoff, Andrew N. : University of Washington
Andrew N. Meltzoff, Ph.D. revolutionized the field of child psychology with his discoveries about how much infants
know, learn, and remember. He is a professor of psychology and the University of Washington, and his research has
been featured in Time, The New York Times, and museum exhibits worldwide. He and his wife, Dr. Kuhl, live with
their daughter in Seattle, Washington.
Kuhl, Patrica K. :
Patricia K. Kuhl, Ph.D
Sample Chapter
Chapter One
Ancient Questions and a Young Science
Walk upstairs, open the door gently, and look in the crib. What do you see? Most of us see a picture of innocence
and helplessness, a clean slate. But, in fact, what we see in the crib is the greatest mind that has ever existed,
the most powerful learning machine in the universe. The tiny fingers and mouth are exploration devices that probe
the alien world around them with more precision than any Mars rover. The crumpled ears take a buzz of incomprehensible
noise and flawlessly turn it into meaningful language. The wide eyes that sometimes seem to peer into your very
soul actually do just that, deciphering your deepest feelings. The downy head surrounds a brain that is forming
millions of new connections every day. That, at least, is what thirty years of scientific research have told us.
This book is about that research. What are these deeply familiar yet surprisingly strange creatures we call children
really like? Of course, human beings have always wondered, pondered, and even agonized about their children. But
most of the time, the questions people ask are practical. Some are immediate, questions about how to get them to
eat more or cry less. Some are long-term, questions about how to turn them into the right kind of grown-ups. These
are important questions, crucial for the survival of any civilization (not to mention any parent), but we won't
have very much to say about them. This book won't tell you how to make babies easier or smarter or nicer, or how
to get them to go to sleep or to Harvard. There are lots of books that do that, or anyway say they do, right between
the cooking and house-repairs sections in your local bookstore. Our questions are both harder and easier than the
practical questions. We want to understand children, not renovate them.
While the purported answers to the practical questions fill volumes, all of us who have lived with babies and young
children, or even just looked at them, have found ourselves asking deeper questions. We decided to become developmental
psychologists and study children because there aren't any Martians. These brilliant beings with the little bodies
and big heads are the closest we can get to a truly alien intelligence (even if we may occasionally suspect that
they are bent on making us their slaves). Babies are fascinating, mysterious, and just plain weird. Watch awhile.
A three-month-old catches sight of the stripes on a shopping bag and follows it carefully as her father carries
it around the room, staring with intense cross-eyed concentration. A one-year-old visiting the zoo points at the
elephant and says triumphantly and with great certainty, "Doggie!" A "terrible two-year-old"
turns toward the expressly forbidden switch of the computer and slowly, deliberately, watching his mother every
moment, erases the day's work. As we change diapers and wipe noses, all of us, no matter how preoccupied, find
ourselves exclaiming, "What's going on in that little head of hers? Where on earth did he get that from?"
Developmental psychologists have had the luxury of asking those questions systematically and even getting answers
to them. We're actually starting to understand what's going on in that little head of hers and where on earth he
got that from.
Studying babies is full of fascination in its own right. But developmental research also helps answer a more general,
deep, and ancient question, not just about babies but about us. We human beings, no more than a few pounds of protein
and water, have come to understand the origins of the universe, the nature of life, and even a few things about
ourselves. No other animal, and not even the most sophisticated computer, knows as much. And yet every one of us
started out as the helpless creature in the crib. Only a few tiny flickers of information from the outside world
reach that creature -- a few photons hitting its retinas, some sound waves vibrating at its eardrums -- and yet
we end up knowing how the world works. How do we do it? How did we get here from there?
The new research about babies holds answers to those questions, too. It turns out that the capacities that allow
us to learn about the world and ourselves have their origins in infancy. We are born with the ability to discover
the secrets of the universe and of our own minds, and with the drive to explore and experiment until we do. Science
isn't just the specialized province of a chilly elite; instead, it's continuous with the kind of learning every
one of us does when we're very small.
Trying to understand human nature is part of human nature. Developmental scientists are themselves engaged in the
same enterprise and use the same cognitive tools as the babies they study. The scientist peering into the crib,
looking for answers to some of the deepest questions about how minds and the world and language work, sees the
scientist peering out of the crib, who, it turns out, is doing much the same thing. No wonder they both smile.
The Ancient Questions
How can we know so much when our senses are so limited? This problem -- the problem of knowledge -- is one of the
oldest and most profound problems of philosophy. The branch of philosophy called epistemology is devoted to it.
Three versions of the problem are especially important and puzzling to grown-ups and children alike. We'll call
them the Other Minds problem, the External World problem, and the Language problem. The new developmental psychology
helps answer all three.
Take a perfectly ordinary event. Every Sunday night, we sit around the dinner table. We serve up healthy leek and
potato soup (which must be eaten before you get dessert), pass the salt and pepper, butter the bread, push our
chairs back from the big wooden table. We laugh, fight, and tease one another. One of the big brothers invariably
makes a rude joke at the expense of the little brother, who is hurt and demands an apology. No experience could
be more banal, more domestic, more comfortable and familiar. Except that, actually, we don't experience any of
this at all...
Review
"Finally, a book on child development that is both authoritative and really fun to read! Professionals,
students, and the public at large can all learn from it. In short, a brilliant book."
--John H. Flavell, Ph.D., professor of psychology, Stanford University
"This book is at once a masterful synthesis of the latest findings about the minds of children and a provacative
argument that young children resemble practicing scientists. Few books about human development speak so eloquently
to both scholars and parents."
--Howard Gardner, Ph.D., author of Intelligence Reframed: Multiple Intelligences in the 21st Century
"Fascinat ing...It isn't until you read The Scientist in the Crib alongside more conventional child-development
books that you begin to appreciate the full implications of its argument."
--Malcolm Gladwell, The New Yorker
"The Scientist in the Crib is a triumph, a clear-headed account of the kinds of things that go on
in the heads of young children....[This book] speaks in the voice of intelligent parents talking to other intelligent
parents--witty, rather personal, and very well informed."
--The New York Review of Books
"Meticulous ly researched, combining charm and erudition, humor and humanity, The Scientist in the Crib...should
be placed in the hands of teachers, social workers, therapists, policymakers, expectant parents and everyone else
who cares about children."
--The Washington Post
"[An] excellent book...it should be of interest to anyone curious about the human mind and its origins."
--The Chicago Tribune
"This book is a valuable addition to parents' libraries...After reading it, parents can be enthralled as
they watch their new babies imitate and learn the 'rules' of communication and speech learning. What an interesting
book by three eminent 'baby watchers!'
--T. Berry Brazelton, MD, Harvard Medical School
Submitted by Publishers, July, 2001
Summary
This exciting book by three pioneers in the new field of cognitive science discusses important discoveries about
how much babies and young children know and learn, and how much parents naturally teach them. It argues that evolution
designed us both to teach and learn, and that the drive to learn is our most important instinct. It also reveals
as fascinating insights about our adult capacities and how even young children -- as well as adults -- use some
of the same methods that allow scientists to learn so much about the world. Filled with surprise at every turn,
this vivid, lucid, and often funny book gives us a new view of the inner life of children and the mysteries of
the mind.