
Origins of Intelligence
Infancy and Early Childhood
M. Lewis(Editor)
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers
Published on 31. December 1995
Book
Hardback
414 pages
978-0-306-30867-3 (ISBN)
Description
A preface is an excellent opportunity for an editor to speak directly to the reader and share with him the goals, hopes, struggles, and produc- tion of a volume such as this. It seems to me that I have an important obligation to tell you the origins of this volume. This is no idle chatter, but rather an integral part of scientific inquiry. It is important before delving into content, theory, and methodology to talk about motivation, values, and goals. Indeed, it is always necessary to explicate from the very beginning of any intellectual and scientific inquiry the implicit assumptions governing that exercise. Failure to do so is not only an ethical but a scientific failure. We learn, albeit all too slowly, that science is a moral enterprise and that values must be explicitly stated, removing from the shadows those implicit beliefs that often motivate and deter- mine our results. No better or more relevant example can be found than in the review of the implicit assumptions of the early IQ psychometri- cians in this country (see Kamin's book, The Science and Politics of IQ, 1975).
More details
Edition
1976 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Springer Science+Business Media
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Weight
0 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-306-30867-3 (9780306308673)
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Content
1 What Do We Mean When We Say "Infant Intelligence Scores"? A Sociopolitical Question.- 2 A History of Infant Intelligence Testing.- 3 Value and Limitations of Infant Tests: An Overview.- 4 Toward an Epigenetic Conception of Mental Development in the First Three Years of Life.- 5 Organization of Sensorimotor Intelligence.- 6 An Evolutionary Perspective on Infant Intelligence: Species Patterns and Individual Variations.- 7 Early Learning and Intelligence.- 8 Environmental Risk in Fetal and Neonatal Life and Measured Infant Intelligence.- 9 Understanding "Why": Its Significance in Early Intelligence.- 10 Cross-Cultural Studies of Infant Intelligence.- 11 Social Class and Infant Intelligence.- 12 Looking Smart: The Relationship between Affect and Intelligence in Infancy.- 13 The Interplay between Cognition and Motivation in Infancy.- Author Index.