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The construction of reality in the child

"The study of sensorimotor or practical intelligence in the first two years of development has taught us how the child, at first directly assimilating the external environment to his own activity, later, in order to extend this assimilation, forms an increasing number of schemata which are both more mobile and better able to intercoordinate. Side by side with this progressive involvement of the assimilatory schemata runs the continuous elaboration of the external universe, in other words, the convergent development of the explicatory function. It is apparent that a development of explicatory accommodation corresponds to the progress of implicatory assimilation. The increasing coherence of the schemata thus parallels the formation of a world of objects and spatial relationships, in short, the elaboration of a solid and permanent universe. We must study the second aspect of the evolution of sensorimotor intelligence. This new phase of mental development is of course inseparable from the first, object and causality are nothing other than accommodation to the reality of the schematism of assimilation. It is justifiable to study these phases separately, for the description of behavior no longer suffices to account for these new products of intellectual activity; it is the subject's own interpretation of things which we must now try to analyze. The symmetry between the representation of things and the functional development of intelligence enables us from now on to glimpse the directional line of the evolution of the concepts of object, space, causality, and time. This organization of reality occurs, as we shall see, to the extent that the self is freed from itself by finding itself and so assigns itself a place as a thing among things, an event among events. The transition from chaos to cosmos, which we shall study in the perception and representation of the world in the first two years of life, is brought about through an elimination of egocentrism comparable to that which we have described on the plane of the child's reflective thought and logic. But it is in its elementary and primordial form that we shall now try to grasp this component process of understanding; we shall thus comprehend how it depends on the mechanism of intellectual assimilation"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved).

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http://schema.org/alternateName

  • "APA ebooks"@en
  • "Construction du réel chez l'enfant"@it
  • "Child's construction of reality"@en

http://schema.org/description

  • "Piaget estudia las etapas que recorre el niño en sus primeros años y que le permiten alcanzar la representación misma. Esta construcción de lo real se obtiene por dos movimientos complementarios: acomodación del pensamiento a las cosas y asimilación de los nuevos datos en el marco de lo previamente adquirido."@es
  • "Parallèlement à l'assimilation du milieu extérieur par l'enfant pendant les deux premières années de sa vie (cf. ##La naissance de l'intelligence chez l'enfant##), l'enfant élabore l'univers extérieur, c'est-à-dire la fonction d'explication: la notion d'objet, d'espace, de causalité, de temps; unité du processus de l'élaboration de l'univers."
  • "Bambini: aspetti psicologici e psichiatrici - Psicologia: generalia - Psicologia: psicologia dell' individuo - Psicologia: ecologia della mente, rapporti con la biologia."
  • ""The study of sensorimotor or practical intelligence in the first two years of development has taught us how the child, at first directly assimilating the external environment to his own activity, later, in order to extend this assimilation, forms an increasing number of schemata which are both more mobile and better able to intercoordinate. Side by side with this progressive involvement of the assimilatory schemata runs the continuous elaboration of the external universe, in other words, the convergent development of the explicatory function. It is apparent that a development of explicatory accommodation corresponds to the progress of implicatory assimilation. The increasing coherence of the schemata thus parallels the formation of a world of objects and spatial relationships, in short, the elaboration of a solid and permanent universe. We must study the second aspect of the evolution of sensorimotor intelligence. This new phase of mental development is of course inseparable from the first, object and causality are nothing other than accommodation to the reality of the schematism of assimilation. It is justifiable to study these phases separately, for the description of behavior no longer suffices to account for these new products of intellectual activity; it is the subject's own interpretation of things which we must now try to analyze. The symmetry between the representation of things and the functional development of intelligence enables us from now on to glimpse the directional line of the evolution of the concepts of object, space, causality, and time. This organization of reality occurs, as we shall see, to the extent that the self is freed from itself by finding itself and so assigns itself a place as a thing among things, an event among events. The transition from chaos to cosmos, which we shall study in the perception and representation of the world in the first two years of life, is brought about through an elimination of egocentrism comparable to that which we have described on the plane of the child's reflective thought and logic. But it is in its elementary and primordial form that we shall now try to grasp this component process of understanding; we shall thus comprehend how it depends on the mechanism of intellectual assimilation"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)"
  • ""The study of sensorimotor or practical intelligence in the first two years of development has taught us how the child, at first directly assimilating the external environment to his own activity, later, in order to extend this assimilation, forms an increasing number of schemata which are both more mobile and better able to intercoordinate. Side by side with this progressive involvement of the assimilatory schemata runs the continuous elaboration of the external universe, in other words, the convergent development of the explicatory function. It is apparent that a development of explicatory accommodation corresponds to the progress of implicatory assimilation. The increasing coherence of the schemata thus parallels the formation of a world of objects and spatial relationships, in short, the elaboration of a solid and permanent universe. We must study the second aspect of the evolution of sensorimotor intelligence. This new phase of mental development is of course inseparable from the first, object and causality are nothing other than accommodation to the reality of the schematism of assimilation. It is justifiable to study these phases separately, for the description of behavior no longer suffices to account for these new products of intellectual activity; it is the subject's own interpretation of things which we must now try to analyze. The symmetry between the representation of things and the functional development of intelligence enables us from now on to glimpse the directional line of the evolution of the concepts of object, space, causality, and time. This organization of reality occurs, as we shall see, to the extent that the self is freed from itself by finding itself and so assigns itself a place as a thing among things, an event among events. The transition from chaos to cosmos, which we shall study in the perception and representation of the world in the first two years of life, is brought about through an elimination of egocentrism comparable to that which we have described on the plane of the child's reflective thought and logic. But it is in its elementary and primordial form that we shall now try to grasp this component process of understanding; we shall thus comprehend how it depends on the mechanism of intellectual assimilation"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)."@en
  • ""The study of sensorimotor or practical intelligence in the first two years of development has taught us how the child, at first directly assimilating the external environment to his own activity, later, in order to extend this assimilation, forms an increasing number of schemata which are both more mobile and better able to intercoordinate. Side by side with this progressive involvement of the assimilatory schemata runs the continuous elaboration of the external universe, in other words, the convergent development of the explicatory function. It is apparent that a development of explicatory accommodation corresponds to the progress of implicatory assimilation. The increasing coherence of the schemata thus parallels the formation of a world of objects and spatial relationships, in short, the elaboration of a solid and permanent universe. We must study the second aspect of the evolution of sensorimotor intelligence. This new phase of mental development is of course inseparable from the first, object and causality are nothing other than accommodation to the reality of the schematism of assimilation. It is justifiable to study these phases separately, for the description of behavior no longer suffices to account for these new products of intellectual activity; it is the subject's own interpretation of things which we must now try to analyze. The symmetry between the representation of things and the functional development of intelligence enables us from now on to glimpse the directional line of the evolution of the concepts of object, space, causality, and time. This organization of reality occurs, as we shall see, to the extent that the self is freed from itself by finding itself and so assigns itself a place as a thing among things, an event among events. The transition from chaos to cosmos, which we shall study in the perception and representation of the world in the first two years of life, is brought about through an elimination of egocentrism comparable to that which we have described on the plane of the child's reflective thought and logic. But it is in its elementary and primordial form that we shall now try to grasp this component process of understanding; we shall thus comprehend how it depends on the mechanism of intellectual assimilation"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)."
  • "First published in 1999."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Ressources Internet"
  • "Umweltverständnis"
  • "Electronic books"
  • "Electronic books"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "Der Aufbau der Wirklichkeit beim Kinde"
  • "A construção do real na criança"
  • "A construção do real na criança"@pt
  • "Construirea realului la copil"
  • "La contruccion de la real en el nino"
  • "La construzione del reale nel bambino"
  • "La Construcción de lo real en el niño"@es
  • "La Construcción de lo real en el niño"
  • "La construction du reel chez l'enfant : 2e ed. [Introd. de l'A.]"
  • "La contrucción de lo real en el niño"
  • "The construction of reality in the child"
  • "The construction of reality in the child"@en
  • "The Construction of Reality in the Child"
  • "La contruction du reel chez l'enfant"
  • "Construction Du Reel Chez L'enfant"
  • "La construcción de lo real en el niño"@es
  • "La construcción de lo real en el niño"
  • "La construction du réel chez l'enfant"
  • "La construction du réel chez l'enfant"@es
  • "La Construction du réel chez l'enfant"
  • "La costruzione del reale nel bambino"@it
  • "La costruzione del reale nel bambino"
  • "Construction of reality in the child"@en
  • "Construction of reality in the child"
  • "La Construction du réel chez l'enfant. [By Jean Piaget. Published jointly by the Institut des Sciences de l'Éducation and the Société Belge de Pédotechnie.]"@en
  • "La construction du reel chez l'enfant : 3e ed"
  • "La construccion de lo real en el nino"@es
  • "A Construção do real na criança"@pt
  • "The child's construction of reality"
  • "The child's construction of reality"@en
  • "La construction du reel chez l'enfant"
  • "... La construction du réel chez l'enfant"
  • "The construction of reality in the child / (1. printing)"
  • "Construction Of Reality In The Child"@en
  • "La construction du réel chez le̓nfant"
  • "La Construction du réel chez le̓nfant"

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