Are Babies Born Good?
New research offers surprising answers to the age-old question of where morality comes from
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2013, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
The Yale Infant Cognition Center is particularly interested in one of the most exalted social functions: ethical judgments, and whether babies are hard-wired to make them. The lab’s initial study along these lines, published in 2007 in the journal Nature, startled the scientific world by showing that in a series of simple morality plays, 6- and 10-month-olds overwhelmingly preferred “good guys” to “bad guys.” “This capacity may serve as the foundation for moral thought and action,” the authors wrote. It “may form an essential basis for...more abstract concepts of right and wrong.”
The last few years produced a spate of related studies hinting that, far from being born a “perfect idiot,” as Jean-Jacques Rousseau argued, or a selfish brute, as Thomas Hobbes feared, a child arrives in the world provisioned with rich, broadly pro-social tendencies and seems predisposed to care about other people. Children can tell, to an extent, what is good and bad, and often act in an altruistic fashion. “Giving Leads to Happiness in Young Children,” a study of under-2-year-olds concluded. “Babies Know What’s Fair” was the upshot of another study, of 19- and 21-month-olds. Toddlers, the new literature suggests, are particularly equitable. They are natural helpers, aiding distressed others at a cost to themselves, growing concerned if someone shreds another person’s artwork and divvying up earnings after a shared task, whether the spoils take the form of detested rye bread or precious Gummy Bears.
This all sounds like cheering news for humanity, especially parents who nervously chant “share, share, share” as their children navigate the communal toy box. Indeed, some of these studies suggest that children’s positive social inclinations are so deeply ingrained that it doesn’t matter what parents say or do: A Harvard experiment, nicknamed “The Big Mother Study” (as in Big Mother Is Watching You), showed that small children helped others whether or not a parent commanded them to help or was even present.
These findings may seem counterintuitive to anyone who has seen toddlers pull hair in a playground tunnel or pistol-whip one another with a plastic triceratops. Day to day, babies can seem unfeeling and primitive, or at the very least unfathomably bizarre, afraid of donkeys one minute and the moon the next, their prismatic minds beaming nonsense and non sequiturs instead of the secrets of our higher nature. No seasoned parent can believe that nurture doesn’t make a difference, or that nature trumps all. The question is where the balance lies.
“Where morality comes from is a really hard problem,” says Alison Gopnik, a developmental psychologist at the University of California at Berkeley. “There isn’t a moral module that is there innately. But the elements that underpin morality—altruism, sympathy for others, the understanding of other people’s goals—are in place much earlier than we thought, and clearly in place before children turn 2.”
***
Though housed in a stern stone edifice on the Yale campus, the baby cognition lab is a happy nest of an office with a comfy couch, meant to be torn apart by one tornado of a toddler after another, and huge, sunlight-streaming windows, through which researchers spy on approaching strollers. Ranging in age from 3 months to 2 years, the visiting infants are elaborately received by staff members who crawl around on the floor with them while parents sign consent forms. (A little-known expense of this line of research is the cost of new pants: The knees wear out fast.) In the back room, the atmosphere is less cozy. There’s lots of weird stuff lying around: plastic molds of Cheerios, houseplants that have been spray-painted silver.
Infant morality studies are so new that the field’s grand dame is 29-year-old J. Kiley Hamlin, who was a graduate student at the Yale lab in the mid-2000s. She was spinning her wheels for a thesis project when she stumbled on animated presentations that one of her predecessors had made, in which a “climber” (say, a red circle with goggle eyes) attempted to mount a hill, and a “helper” (a triangle in some trials) assisted him, or a “hinderer” (a square) knocked him down. Previous infant research had focused on other aspects of the interaction, but Hamlin wondered if a baby observing the climber’s plight would prefer one interfering character over another.
“As adults, we like the helper and don’t like the hinderer,” says Hamlin, now an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia. “We didn’t think babies would do that too. It was just like, ‘Let’s give it a try because Kiley’s a first-year graduate student and she doesn’t know what she’s doing.’”
Wynn and her husband, the psychologist Paul Bloom, collaborated on much of Hamlin’s research, and Wynn remembers being a bit more optimistic: “Do babies have attitudes, render judgments? I just found that to be a very intuitively gripping question,” she says. “If we tend to think of babies being born and developing attitudes in the world as a result of their own experiences, then babies shouldn’t be responding [to the scenarios]. But maybe we are built to identify in the world that some things are good and some things are not, and some helpful and positive social interaction is to be approved of and admired.”
In fact, 6- and 10-month-old babies did seem to have strong natural opinions about the climbing scenarios: They passionately preferred the helper to the hinderer, as assessed by the amount of time they spent looking at the characters. This result “was totally surreal,” Hamlin says—so revolutionary that the researchers themselves didn’t quite trust it. They designed additional experiments with plush animal puppets helping and hindering each other; at the end babies got the chance to reach for the puppet of their choice. “Basically every single baby chose the nice puppet,” Hamlin remembers.
Then they tested 3-month-old infants. The researchers couldn’t ask the infants to reach for the puppets, because 3-month-olds can’t reliably reach, so they tracked the subjects’ eye movements instead. These infants, too, showed an aversion to the hinderer.
When I visited, Tasimi was recreating versions of Hamlin’s puppet shows as background work for a new project.
The son of Albanian restaurateurs, Tasimi likes to say that his parents would “prefer that I merely produce babies, instead of study them.” Friends joke that he attends Yale to be a puppeteer. Though it’s decidedly unfashionable in the developmental field to admit that one enjoys the company of babies, Tasimi clearly does. He’d only been back at work for a few days, and he often looked agonized when we walked outside, but in the lab he grinned broadly. When one of his subjects blew a blizzard of raspberries, he whispered: “The best/worst thing about this job is you want to laugh, but you can’t.”
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Comments (20)
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I think that babies are born with certain instincts, and it is up to the surrounding environment to emphasize the right morals.
Posted by Spockers on April 2,2013 | 06:58 PM
I recently saw what you are describing about babies and their empathy. It involved 2 grandchildren. The 21 month old slipped off the kitchen bench and landed under the table. Of course, he was crying loudly, more scared than hurt. His cousin, about 19 1/2 months old was very concerned and as he kept crying she became more and more concerned and looked very upset. When he stopped crying, she went back to smiling and laughing. I read your article back in January and found it interesting. But what I found the most interesting was the confusion this kind of behavior caused your scientists who are exploring this phenomenom. Have you ever considered that those babies are made in God's image which means they mirror his concern and love for humans? It's a lot harder to believe that they evolved out of the "slime" and somehow just happened to become empathetic - in fact it's ridiculous and amazing that faced with creation they have devised these weird solutions and can't see any other solution to these questions.
Posted by JoAnn Selander on March 14,2013 | 04:08 PM
Fascinating study! I saw a video about these studies awhile back and didn't know where to find more information. This article states that 3 month old babies prefer their own race- I wonder at what age that changes or does it stay the same? I read another study that said even among black children, they choose a 'lighter' colored person over a darker person, when asked which they would like for a friend. And like another reply, I do believe that some children ARE 'born bad' and show violent and cruel tendencies at a very young age. Hopefully someday we WILL be able to find out why that is and how to change it.
Posted by bluff bunny on February 17,2013 | 04:45 AM
I will comment the same here as I did when WSJ published the same article. Everything that is being interpreted as morality can also be explained as self-preservation. Morality is (still) learned; self-preservation is not.
Posted by Steve Borsher on February 16,2013 | 01:29 PM
It would appear that the criticisms of the baby research focus, not so much on the underlying question of inherited basic morality, as on what factors impinge on the basic morality-set that babies are born with. It would be foolish to claim humans are born without inherited social structure genes any more than it would be to claim the same for any other creature. Clearly, every animal has its hard-wired social interaction rules. As clearly, humans could not be without them. This is not to say that, being the complex creatures humans are, those rules aren't frequently affected by the environment into which the baby is born, not to mention the prenatal conditions. And it's not saying that babies can't be born with faulty "wiring," so to speak. Sociopaths may be born as well as raised. But as to whether or not we're born with basic social interaction instructions, it couldn't be logically otherwise. The problems of research are to determine those structures and what affects them.
Posted by Johan Mathiesen on February 6,2013 | 12:21 PM
Randall, I don't think you understand what the word theory means. Let me help you: a theory is a well-substantiated, well-supported, well-documented explanation for our observations. It ties together all the facts about something, providing an explanation that fits all the observations and can be used to make predictions. In science, theory is the ultimate goal, the explanation. It's as close to proven as anything in science can be. Gravity is a theory, but I don't see you saying "it's just a theory". Truth is, all our observations are supported by it, as well as its predictions that we've tested. Also, gravity is real! You can observe it for yourself. Just because it's real doesn't mean that the explanation is a law. The explanation, in scientific terms, is called a theory. Evolution is the same. There's the fact of evolution. Evolution (genetic change over generations) happens, just like gravity does. Don't take my word for it, learn about it (and from a legitimate scientific source, not an ignorant, misinformed creationist website. Here's a link so it's easier: http://evolution.berkeley.edu/ or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction_to_evolution ). But that's not the issue we are addressing here. The Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection is our best explanation for the fact of evolution. It has been tested and scrutinized for over 150 years, and is supported by all the relevant observations. The truth is, whether you like it or not, evolution is a fact and there's no way you can deny that. If you have evidence disproving evolution, bring it forward to the scientific community, have it submitted for peer review, and collect your Nobel Prize. Until then, stop disrespecting the scientists that do so much for humanity. It's amazing how much people dismiss everything that scientists discover these days, especially when it goes against their beliefs. It's closed-minded, ignorant, and quite frankly, absolutely offensive.
Posted by Sebastian on January 16,2013 | 02:13 AM
It's hard to believe that such bold proclamations are based on such scant evidence. The more important thing is the intent to prove that people are born good, rather than being born with sin in their hearts as the Bible relates. Most of the experiments suggest to me that the babies know right from wrong and tend to prefer the hero to the villian. That's interesting in itself. But parents know that though kids know the difference between right and wrong, they must constantly be corrected from choosing the wrong or forbidden thing. Sin is certainly inherent, but so is some good too. We are a mixed bag from the beginning and each must decide which impulses to pursue.
Posted by tony on January 15,2013 | 11:22 AM
I have to agreed with Murray. I don't see how the researcher's attacks connects to the rest of the story. Is the author implying that the guys who attacked Tasimi were born good and became criminals because of their environments or they were bad from birth? Does she have any evidence or is this based on her assumptions?
Posted by MKay on January 9,2013 | 10:57 PM
This text is one of the most mind blowing I have read in all my time. Who knew what babies have known!They must think that were domesticated trying to teach them known essentials.
Posted by Cassidy on January 9,2013 | 10:42 AM
I was delighted to see the account. It confirmed similar experiences in my youth, although wasn't as fearful since I was immediately beaten unconscious. Recent studies of concussion confirm my then-impressions of slight residual cognitive loss compared to before. The author's assault and later robbery was exactly what many concealed weapon permit holders fear, especially if accompanied by a female relative or children. The FBI statistics of such assaults could be improved considerably, and should be, as they should be analyzed as well, not just homicides as elsewhere. And yes, the article confirms what many of us parents have seen in our children and grandchildren. Let me show you my pictures and tell you my tales. And please, be careful with the guns. They can get to them surprisingly young if you don't.
Posted by DavidAnthonyC on January 8,2013 | 06:41 PM
I was really exited to read this article, but the whole first page, about a gang attack, doesn't belong here. I understand that the author wants to know where evil comes from, wants to find meaning in what happened. Just before, I read the Avaaz article on the woman in India gang raped and killed. Not easy topics for early morning in bed! I believe the Bible has answers for some questions that we cannot solve ourselves. That the Bible is the truth, and devinely inspired.
Posted by Murray on January 4,2013 | 02:54 AM
When are we as created human beings going to grasp the very simple statement that, "Evolution is a theory?" Regardless how much "good" research is done, [and I'm all for science] the FACT still remains, "Evolution is STILL a theory." And ire of it all is, that "Evolution is taught as a fact, when in reality---it is still a THEORY." In effect then, was this article written on the premise that "our" so-called ancestors came from amoebas, poly-wogs and eventually apes? I don't buy that "theory." Even King David knew he would see his deceased baby son again some day [as in the after-life of heaven 2 Samuel 12:18-23]. Therefore, it is quite plain that babies are innocent in their inf-antsy. Jesus says, "I tell you the truth, unless you [adults] change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven" [Matthew 18:1-3]. Bottom line? Until a person humbly accepts that fact that he or she is created in God's image, you will never experience the unconditional love of God through the Lord Jesus Christ. Admittedly, some answers may come by scientific research, but since science cannot explain everything---this is where faith comes in. And it does not take a rocket scientist to know that.
Posted by Randall on January 4,2013 | 07:37 PM
My 16 month old girl approached my bed and saw her new baby sister nursing. She immediately frowned, pushed the baby's face away from the breast and stated strongly, "It bites!" What would the author say about this interaction?
Posted by jillstar on January 4,2013 | 05:16 PM
I read through page 4 using the number links, but once I got to 5 the 5 and Next don't work. I tried Single Page, but they all come back as page not found.
Posted by Robin on January 4,2013 | 02:42 PM
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