| Literature DB >> 26490060 |
Julian Jara-Ettinger1, Edward Gibson2, Celeste Kidd3,4, Steve Piantadosi3.
Abstract
Cooperation often results in a final material resource that must be shared, but deciding how to distribute that resource is not straightforward. A distribution could count as fair if all members receive an equal reward (egalitarian distributions), or if each member's reward is proportional to their merit (merit-based distributions). Here, we propose that the acquisition of numerical concepts influences how we reason about fairness. We explore this possibility in the Tsimane', a farming-foraging group who live in the Bolivian rainforest. The Tsimane' learn to count in the same way children from industrialized countries do, but at a delayed and more variable timeline, allowing us to de-confound number knowledge from age and years in school. We find that Tsimane' children who can count produce merit-based distributions, while children who cannot count produce both merit-based and egalitarian distributions. Our findings establish that the ability to count - a non-universal, language-dependent, cultural invention - can influence social cognition.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26490060 DOI: 10.1111/desc.12351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Sci ISSN: 1363-755X