1st Edition

3-System Theory of the Cognitive Brain A Post-Piagetian Approach to Cognitive Development

By Olivier Houdé Copyright 2019
    150 Pages
    by Routledge

    150 Pages
    by Routledge

    3-System Theory of the Cognitive Brain: A Post-Piagetian Approach to Cognitive Development puts forward Olivier Houdé’s 3-System theory of the cognitive brain, based on numerous post-Piagetian psychological and brain imaging data acquired from children and adults. This ground-breaking theory simultaneously anchors itself in a deep understanding of the history of psychology and fuels current debates on thinking, reasoning and cognitive development.

    Spanning the long-term history of psychology, from Plato and Aristotle to more current experimental psychology, this pioneering work goes beyond the approaches of Kahneman (i.e. System 1 theory) and Piaget (i.e. System 2 theory) to put forward a theory in which the inhibitory-control system (i.e. System 3) takes precedence. Houdé argues that the brain contains a third control system located in the prefrontal cortex which is dedicated to inhibiting Kahneman’s intuitive heuristics system and activating Piaget’s logical algorithms system anywhere in the brain on a case-by-case basis, depending on the goal and context of the task. 3-System Theory of the Cognitive Brain simultaneously explains the early logical abilities discovered in babies, the dynamic, strategic and non-linear process of cognitive development in children, and the fast heuristics and biases observed in adults. Houdé considers the exciting implications of this theory on neuro-education using examples from the classroom.

    This book is essential reading for students and researchers in cognitive development and education, child psychology, reasoning and neurosciences.

    Preface: One, two or three systems of thinking in human beings?

    Part 1 Chapter 1: From Psyche to the Logos – Ancient times

    Part 1 Chapter 2: Faith, Truth and Reasoning in The Middle Ages

    Part 1 Chapter 3: The inconstancy of the human being: from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment

    Part 1 Chapter 4: Towards a science of psychology: The nineteenth and twentieth centuries

    Part 2: Introduction

    Part 2 Chapter 5: Jean Piaget’s theory or the logical system

    Part 2 Chapter 6: The dual-system theories: System 1 (intuition) and System 2 (logic)

    Part 2 Chapter 7: Inhibiting in order to reason: System 3 (executive)

    Part 2 Chapter 8: The paradox of reasoning in infants

    Conclusion

    Bibliography

     

    Biography

    Olivier Houdé is Professor of Psychology at the University of Paris and the honorary director of the Laboratory for the Psychology of Child Development and Education (LaPsyDÉ) at the Sorbonne. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Dictionary of Cognitive Science (Routledge, 2004) and the co-Editor-in-Chief of The Cambridge Handbook of Cognitive Development (forthcoming).