Monday, September 8, 2025

MODULE 2: Exam practice & babies

 Exam practice

_________________________


Module 2: Childhood


Question for this module: is childhood good or bad for children?
  • good or bad during the period of childhood
  • good or bad intrinsically, not instrumentally
  • next time: Sarah Hannan, "Why childhood is bad for children"
  • today: babies


Alison Gopnik
  • The Philosophical Baby: What Children's Minds Tell Us About Truth, Love, and the Meaning of Life (Picador, 2009)
  • Alison Gopnik is a professor of philosophy and psychology at Berkeley

Chapter 1: What is childhood? Why is human childhood so long?
    "What is childhood? It's a distinctive developmental period in which young human beings are uniquely dependent on adults." (Gopnik p. 10) DEPENDENCY

    Humans have a wealth of knowledge that enables us to adapt to and modify different environments, so children have a huge amount to learn. (Gopnik p. 10) DEFICIENCY 

    But Gopnik is arguing for a positive view of childhood
    • "In some ways, young children are actually smarter, more imaginative, more caring, and even more conscious than adults are." (Gopnik p. 5).
    • "Human development is more like metamorphosis, like caterpillars becoming butterflies." (Gopnik p. 9) 
    • Except children are butterflies and gradually become boring ol' caterpillars



    _________________________

    Chapter 4: What is it like to be a baby? Babies are "more conscious"

    Babies = children under 3 years old

    Gopnik's argument:
    1. If you are conscious of more, then you are more conscious. 
    2. Babies are conscious of more.  THEREFORE
    3. Babies are more conscious.
    lantern awareness  (babies) vs. spotlight awareness (adults)

    _________________________

    Note: We didn't discuss the material below

    How she supports premise 2 -- babies are conscious of more
    1. babies mostly have exogenous attention (from outside) (p. 116-120) whereas adults have endogenous & exogenous attention; our endogenous attention reduces our exogenous attention
      • the gorilla example
    2. we do routine things on "automatic pilot" (little consciousness) but babies don't
    3. a baby's frontal cortex (which supplies focus) is undeveloped
    4. the two-card experiment (p. 118)
    5. "Infant brains have abundant cholinergic [excitatory] transmitters but the inhibitory transmitters only develop later." (p. 119)
      • excitatory: if N fires, M is more likely to fire
      • inhibitory: if N fires, M is less likely to fire
    6. more drugs are needed to anesthetize a baby (p. 120)
      • note: people used to think just the opposite
    _________________________


    We gradually lose this sort of consciousness as we grow up, but can regain it
    • travel to a new place without a purpose
    • unfocused meditation
    _________________________

    Do babies enjoy their heightened consciousness?