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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper which discusses infant awareness as it is proposed by
Locke with theories of blank slates and the theories of Chomsky who believed that infants
are born with a sense of awareness. The paper argues that Chomsky is accurate in his
theories. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAinfnt2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
it was not actually until the past few decades that the medical community actually conceded to the fact that infants feel pain. With such lack of real knowledge it comes
as no surprise that the controversy concerning infant awareness is a complex and confusing one. In the past there have been many theories, two of which involve the arguments that
an infant is born as a blank slate, as proposed by John Locke, and the other being than an infant is born with sensitivities and knowledge which are further developed
by interaction in the outside world, as presented in the nativist approach from Noam Chomsky. In the following paper we examine these perspectives and argue that though we may not
actually know what an infant is capable of, in terms of awareness and knowledge, they are not born as blank slates but born as individuals with a sense of knowledge,
language, and awareness. Infant Awareness When examining the history of childhood development we find that throughout history there have been several theories as they originate from philosophers. As
one author notes, "philosophers have speculated at length about the nature of children and how they should be reared. Three such philosophical views are original sin, tabula rasa, and innate
goodness" (Anonymous The history of child psychology , 2002; historyofchi_ribu.htm). With the theory of original sin it was assumed that children were inherently bad and should be taught to be
productive members of society. "The goal of child rearing was to provide salvation, to remove sin from the childs life" (Anonymous The history of child psychology , 2002; historyofchi_ribu.htm). However,
towards the end of the 17th century John Locke emerged with his tabula rasa view: "He argued that children are not innately bad but, instead, are like a blank tablet,
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