Hi Jim.

Did this get sent early or did you just want to say "Hi"?

Rick

Dr. Rick Froman, Chair
Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
John Brown University
Siloam Springs, AR  72761
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
________________________________
From: Jim Matiya [[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2011 2:50 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: RE: [tips] Jean Piaget & Albert Einstein




Hi Rick...



Jim Matiya


Adjunct Instructor in Psychology

Florida Gulf Coast University
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>





> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2011 12:53:28 -0500
> Subject: RE: [tips] Jean Piaget & Albert Einstein
>
> Thank you, Kevin for that very informative excerpt illuminating the 
> connection between Piaget and Einstein (and the amusing description of the 
> velocity study). It is interesting to consider the ways that children think 
> about time, space, number and causality and how they might be different from 
> adult conceptions just as relativity is different from an intuitive 
> perception of physics.
>
> What is described here seems to be an interaction of great minds in seeing 
> the similarities between their work but it seems to fall a little short of 
> indicating that Einstein's thinking about developmental psychology pre-dated 
> and influenced his theorizing about relativity. For example, the date of 
> 1928, mentioned as the meeting between Einstein and Piaget would have been 
> well after Einstein's publication of his theory of relativity.
>
> Before I start another relativity-inspired myth, I wonder if there is any 
> evidence that Einstein was influenced by developmental psychology in a way 
> that predated or was concurrent with his theorizing about relativity.
>
> Rick
>
> Dr. Rick Froman, Chair
> Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
> John Brown University
> Siloam Springs, AR 72761
> [email protected]
> ________________________________________
> From: K. H. Grobman [[email protected]]
> Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2011 12:02 PM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> Subject: [tips] Jean Piaget & Albert Einstein
>
> Hi Rick & Everyone,
>
> Rick asks what influence develpmental psychology may have had on Albert 
> Einstein's work. Jean Piaget studied children's invention of time, space, 
> number, and causality (inspired by Immanuel Kant). Einstein focused on the 
> same things in the physical world. Einstein and Piaget spoke with each, and 
> about each other, a number of times.
>
> Einstein used the words "so simple only a genius could have thought of it" to 
> describe the theory advanced by ... Jean Piaget that children don't think 
> like grown-ups. ~ Seymour Papert (the inventor of the children's computer 
> programming language Logo writing about Piaget for TIme Magazine's "The 
> Century’s Greatest Minds", page 105, March 29, 1999).
>
> Einstein was especially intrigued, not only that children think differently, 
> but that their thinking has its own internal logic (i.e., stage). It's much 
> like relativity has its own internal logic separate from the earlier paradigm 
> of Newtonian mechanics. Coming full circle, Kuhn's "paradigm shifts" of 
> scientific progress were inspired by Piaget's stages too.
>
> Does a child's first conception of velocity include comprehension of it as a 
> function of distance and time, or is his notion more primitive and intuitive? 
> Albert Einstein himself posed this question to me in 1928 when I was 
> demonstrating some experiments on causality to him one day. I have since 
> performed a very simple experiment which shows that a child does not think of 
> velocity in terms of the distance-time relation. We place before the child 
> two tunnels, one of which is obviously much longer than the other, and then 
> we push a doll through each tunnel with a metal rod in such a way that the 
> dolls arrive at the other end of both tunnels simultaneously. We ask the 
> child: "Is one tunnel longer than the other?" "Yes, that one." "Did both 
> dolls go through the tunnels at the same speed, or did one go faster than the 
> other?" "The same speed." "Why?" "Because they arrived at the same time." ~ 
> Jean Piaget (Scientific American, March 1957).
>
> I wish academia today were structued to inspire us to be more like Einstein 
> and Piaget - thinking so deeply about fields beyond our own.
>
> Best wishes,
> Kevin
>
>
>
> On Jun 8, 2011, at 8:29 AM, Rick Froman wrote:
> > Of further relevance to psychology, did anyone else read this part
> > of the interview with Alberto Martinez:
> >
> > http://www.utexas.edu/know/2011/06/06/science_secrets/
> >
> > "As for Einstein, writers have contrived reasons why he made his
> > theory of relativity: that his wife was his secret coworker, that he
> > was influenced by patent applications, modern art or mystical
> > beliefs about God. But no, these are all just myths. Surprisingly,
> > there’s more evidence that Einstein was influenced by, of all
> > things, developmental psychology. I’m not saying that this was the
> > most important factor (optics and electrodynamics were far more
> > important), just that it was more important than the factors I just
> > mentioned."
> >
> > If others did read it, am I the only one who doesn't know what he is
> > talking about? What influence did developmental psychology have on
> > Einstein's theorizing?
> >
> >
> > Rick
>
>
> _.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._
> ~ all you can take with you is that which you've given away ~
> ~ teaching & learning developmental psychology ~
> ~ http://www.DevPsy.org ~
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