Egocentrism

Egocentrism

In psychology, egocentrism is defined as a) the incomplete differentiation of the self and the world, including other people and b) the tendency to perceive, understand and interpret the world in terms of the self. The term derives from the Greek "egô", meaning "I". An egocentric person has a limited theory of mind, cannot fully "put himself in other peoples' shoes," and believes everyone sees what he/she sees (or that what he/she sees, in some way, exceeds what others see)

It appears that this egocentric stance towards the world is present mostly in younger children. They are unable to separate their own beliefs, thoughts and ideas from others. For example, if a child sees that there is candy in a box, he assumes that someone else walking into the room also knows that there is candy in that box. He implicitly reasons that "since I know it, you should too". As stated previously this may be rooted in the limitations in the child's theory of mind skills. However, it does not mean that children are unable to put themselves in someone else's shoes. As far as feelings are concerned, it is shown that children exhibit empathy early on and are able to cooperate with others and be aware of their needs and wants.

Jean Piaget (1896-1980) claimed that young children are egocentric. This does not mean that they are selfish, but that they do not have the mental ability to understand that other people may have different opinions and beliefs from themselves. With his colleague Barbel Inhelder, Piaget did a test to investigate egocentrism called the three mountains problem (Piaget & Inhelder 1948/1956). He put children in front of a simple plaster mountain range and then asked them to pick from four pictures the view that he, Piaget, would see. Younger children before age 7, during the so-called pre-operational stage, picked the picture of the view they themselves saw and were therefore found to lack the ability to appreciate a viewpoint different from their own. In other words, their way of reasoning was egocentric. Only when entering the so-called concrete-operational stage at age 7-12, children became capable of "decentring" and could appreciate viewpoints other than their own. In other words, they were capable of perspective-taking.

However the Mountains Study has been criticized for judging only the child's visuo-spatial awareness, rather than egocentrism. A follow up study involving police dolls showed that even young children were able to correctly say what the interviewer would see. It is thought that Piaget overestimated the levels of egocentrism in children.

Egocentrism is thus the child's inability to see other peoples' viewpoints. The child at this stage of cognitive development assumes that their view of the world is the same as other people's, "e.g." a little girl covers her eyes and says 'mummy you can't see me now, can you?'

References

Piaget J & Inhelder B (1948/1956) The child's conception of space. London: Routledge and Paul Kegan

ee also

*Egoism
*Ethnocentrism
*Narcissism
*Selfishness
*Intellectual virtues
*Epistemic virtue
*Adultcentrism
*Solipsism

External links

* [http://www.criticalthinking.org/resources/articles/natural-egocentric.shtml The Human Mind Is Naturally Prone To the Following Egocentric Tendencies] by "Foundation for Critical Thinking"


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  • egocentrism — EGOCENTRÍSM s.n. (livr.) Atitudine a celui care priveşte totul prin prisma intereselor şi a sentimentelor personale, tendinţă de a face din sine centrul universului ; egotism. – Din fr. égocentrisme. Trimis de RACAI, 03.03.2009. Sursa: DEX 98 … …   Dicționar Român

  • egocentrism — n. the personality trait that causes one to attempt to get personal recognition for oneself (especially by unacceptable means). Syn: egoism, self interest, self concern, self centeredness. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • egocentrism — egocentric ► ADJECTIVE ▪ self centred. ► NOUN ▪ an egocentric person. DERIVATIVES egocentrically adverb egocentricity noun egocentrism noun …   English terms dictionary

  • egocentrism — noun see egocentric …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • egocentrism — See egocentrically. * * * …   Universalium

  • egocentrism — noun The constant following of ones egotistical desires to an extreme, usually involving a severe lack of extroverted tendencies …   Wiktionary

  • egocentrism — ego·cen·trism sen .triz əm n 1) EGOCENTRICITY 2) the effort to get personal recognition esp. by socially unacceptable behavior …   Medical dictionary

  • egocentrísm — s. n …   Romanian orthography

  • egocentrism — (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun Concern only for oneself: egocentricity, egoism, egomania, self absorption, self centeredness, self involvement, selfishness. See SELF …   English dictionary for students

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