Jean Piaget Children Quotations
Jean Piaget Quotes about:
Children Quotes from:
- All Children Quotes
- Maria Montessori
- Bible Bible
- Pope Francis
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Michael Jackson
- Rajneesh
- Bill Cosby
- George W Bush
- Marianne Williamson
- Erma Bombeck
- George Bernard Shaw
- Hillary Clinton
- Marian Wright Edelman
- Fred Rogers
- Mother Teresa
- C S Lewis
- Jodi Picoult
- Maurice Sendak
- Neil Gaiman
- Charles Spurgeon
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Sacrifice Quotes
The relations between parents and children are certainly not only those of constraint. There is spontaneous mutual affection, which from the first prompts the child to acts of generosity and even of self-sacrifice, to very touching demonstrations which are in no way prescribed. And here no doubt is the starting point for that morality of good which we shall see developing alongside of the morality of right or duty, and which in some persons completely replaces it.
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Giving Quotes
The majority of parents are poor psychologists and give their children the most questionable moral trainings. It is perhaps in this domain that one realized most how keenly how immoral it can be to believe too much in morality, and how much more precious is a little humanity than all the rules in the world.
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Eye Quotes
The discussion of the game of marbles seems to have led us into rather deep waters. But in the eyes of children the history of the game of marbles has quite as much importance as the history of religion or of forms of government. It Is a history, moreover, that is magnificently spontaneous; and it was therefore perhaps not entirely useless to seek to throw light on the child's judgment of moral value by a preliminary study of the social behaviour of children amongst themselves.
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Small Numbers Quotes
Much research in psychology has been more concerned with how large groups of people behave than about the particular ways in which each individual person thinks... too statistical. I find this disappointing because, in my view of the history of psychology, far more was learned, for example, when Jean Piaget spent several years observing the ways that three children developed, or when Sigmund Freud took several years to examine the thinking of a rather small number of patients.