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In Control
| Article
# : |
16754 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1989 |
1,463 Words |
| Author
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Lewis P. Lipsitt, Ph.d. Lewis P. Lipsitt is professor of psychology and medical
science and director of the Child Study Center at Brown
University in Providence, Rhode Island. |
The history of the field of child development and behavior has been curious, and in numerous ways. In no way has it been more fickle than in its secular trends relating to control of infant behavior. The issue of who and what causes change in a baby's behavior has vexed parents for years and has precipitated repeated controversies among developmental psychologists.
A child's avid or zestful pursuit of pleasure, not to mention avoidance of distressing or annoying events, can be understood in terms of survival. Yet, attributions of who is in control of whom, and with what consequences, condition parents' reactions to their infants' cries and other expressions of dependency. Whether the parent sees the infant as a victim of circumstances beyond his or her own control, on the one hand, or truly in charge (to an extent) of the world he or she experiences, on the other, can mediate very different reactions. The extent to which we respond to another's plea for help depends impressively on how we evaluate the supplicant's need. For those whom we believe to have been overly indulged or babied, we have pejorative terms, like leech and crybaby.
As information rapidly accrues about babies' surprising capabilities, it should not be surprising that after many years of the child's having been viewed as a helpless victim of both fortuitous and deliberately arranged environmental events, the tide has turned. Since the 1960s, infant-behavior investigators have been celebrating, through convincing demonstrations, the remarkable competencies infants display in changing their environment. Newly gathered data show that, contrary to previous perceptions, the newborn can indeed hear, see, taste, smell, feel, and even object strenuously to noxious
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