Talk:Jean Piaget
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Is this really Piaget?
editI saw the following attributed to Piaget: "Intelligence is not what you know, but what you do when you don't know. " Can someone verify it and give a source? it means dat if u dont know something u have all knowledge.
- “Intelligence is not what we know, but what we do when we don’t know.”
Unsourced
editWikiquote no longer allows unsourced quotations, and they are in process of being removed from our pages (see Wikiquote:Limits on quotations); but if you can provide a reliable and precise source for any quote on this list please move it to Jean Piaget. --Antiquary 19:10, 23 March 2009 (UTC)
- During the earliest stages, the child perceives things like a solipsist who is unaware of himself as subject and is familiar only with his own actions.
- During the earliest stages of thought, accommodation remains on the surface of physical as well as social experience.
- It is with children that we have the best chance of studying the development of logical knowledge, mathematical knowledge, physical knowledge, and so forth.
- Only education is capable of saving our societies from possible collapse, whether violent, or gradual.
- Our problem, from the point of view of psychology and from the point of view of genetic epistemology, is to explain how the transition is made from a lower level of knowledge to a level that is judged to be higher.
- Scientific knowledge is in perpetual evolution; it finds itself changed from one day to the next.
- Scientific thought, then, is not momentary; it is not a static instance; it is a process.
- The current state of knowledge is a moment in history, changing just as rapidly as the state of knowledge in the past has ever changed and, in many instances, more rapidly.
Sourced; to be integrated
editSince it's kind of late here (I'm sorry!), and I don't know how the workings here, here is a quote I've found on http://www.papert.org/articles/Papertonpiaget.html
Children have real understanding only of that which they invent themselves, and each time that we try to teach them something too quickly, we keep them from reinventing it themselves.
Time magazine’s special issue on "The Century’s Greatest Minds," page 105, March 29, 1999.