Title of article
Understanding of Evolution May Be Improved by Thinking about People
Author/Authors
Daniel Nettle، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
24
From page
205
To page
228
Abstract
The theory of evolution is poorly understood in the population at large, even by those with some science education. The recurrent misunderstandings can be partly attributed to failure to distinguish between processes which individual organisms undergo and those which populations undergo. They may be so pervasive because we usually explain evolutionary ideas with examples from non-human animals, and our everyday cognition about animals does not track individuals as distinct from the species to which they belong. By contrast, everyday cognition about other people tracks unique individuals as well as general properties of humans. In Study 1, I present experimental evidence that categorization by species occurs more strongly for non-human animals than for other people in 50 British university students. In Study 2, I show, in the same population, that framing evolutionary scenarios in terms of people produces fewer conceptual errors than when logically identical scenarios are framed terms of non-human animals. I conclude that public understanding of evolution might be improved if we began instruction by considering the organisms which are most familiar to us.
Keywords
Social cognition , education , Evolution , human-animal interactions
Journal title
Evolutionary Psychology
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Evolutionary Psychology
Record number
656955
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