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 3 of 5)
He needed 16 compliant 12- or 13-month-olds to complete a preliminary study, and I happened to have one handy, so I brought her along.
The experiment was called “Crackerz.” My OshKosh-clad daughter sat on her dad’s lap; his eyes were closed, so he wouldn’t influence her decisions. I was watching behind the scenes alongside three other adults: one who worked the puppet show curtain and squeaked a rubber toy to get the baby’s attention, one who tracked the baby’s focus so a bell sounded when it drifted, and Tasimi, the puppeteer, who managed to make the plush characters dance around winsomely despite the metal rod in his ulna. The whole production had the avant-garde feel of black-box theater: intentionally primitive, yet hyperprofessional.
First, two identical stuffed bunnies, one in a green shirt and the other in orange, appeared on stage with plates of graham crackers. “Mmmm, yum!” they said. The curtain fell. This was the equivalent of the opening sonnet in a Shakespeare play, a sort of framing device for what followed.
The curtain rose again. A lamb puppet appeared onstage, struggling to open a plastic box with a toy inside. The orange bunny flounced over and slammed the lid shut. My child flinched at this, though it was hard to say if it was the sound of the slamming or the rabbit’s nastiness that spooked her. Her brow furrowed. Then she got bored. A bell dinged after she looked away from the scene for two seconds, and the curtain fell.
It soon rose again: Cue the green bunny. Instead of foiling the lamb’s plans, he helped lift the lid of the toy box. The baby stared, drummed plump fingers on the table for a moment, then looked away. The curtain fell.
This scenario was repeated six times, so the baby would grasp what she was seeing, but the green bunny was always nice and the orange bunny was always mean. At the curtain call, the lab manager emerged with the two puppets. Each offered the baby a graham cracker. I was about to tell the experimenters that my daughter had never even seen a graham cracker and was an extremely picky eater when she grabbed the treat from the nice bunny, as most of the previous babies had done. I felt an unwarranted surge of parental pride. I was not alone in my delight.
“She chose the good guy!” Tasimi said. “After all that, she chose the good guy.”
***
When babies at the Yale lab turn 2, their parents are tactfully invited to return to the university after the child’s third birthday. Researchers tend to avoid that event horizon of toddlerhood, the terrible twos. Renowned for their tantrums, 2-year-olds are tough to test. They speak, but not well, and while active they’re not particularly coordinated.
But not all researchers shun 2-year-olds. The next lab I visited was at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and it has made this age group something of a specialty, through work on toddler altruism (a phrase that, admittedly, rings rather hollow in parental ears).
One advantage of testing slightly older babies and children is that they are able to perform relatively complicated tasks. In the Laboratory for Developmental Studies, the toddlers don’t watch puppets help: They themselves are asked to help.
The chief scientist is Felix Warneken, another young researcher, though not one whose appearance initially telegraphs baby scientist. He stands 6-foot-6. He usually greets children from the floor, playing with them before standing up at the last possible moment. “Only then do they realize they’ve been dealing with a giant,” Warneken says. He usually wore the same red sweater in all his experiments, because he thinks kids like it. In addition to designing groundbreaking studies, he has also dreamed up several toys to reward or distract subjects, including an ingenious device he calls a jingle box: An angled xylophone concealed in a cardboard container, it makes a thrilling sound when wooden blocks are dropped inside.
Warneken was initially interested in how little children read the intentions of others, and the question of whether toddlers would assist others in reaching their goals. He wanted to sound out these behaviors in novel helping experiments—“accidentally” dropping a hat, for instance, and seeing if the kids would return it.
But while this was an interesting idea in principle, his advisers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany said it was quite impossible in practice. Once toddlers got their hot little hands on a desirable object, Warneken was told, “they’ll just hold onto it, and there’s no way they’ll give it back.” Besides, prominent psychologists had previously argued that children are selfish until they are socialized; they acquire altruistic behaviors only as childhood progresses and they are rewarded for following civilization’s rules, or punished for breaking them.
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Comments (16)
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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
I know a few people who were, quite simply, bad from birth and very young childhood--and who have been a trial, a plague, a heartbreak, and a disaster to their decent parents and decent siblings, and who in my opinion should have been drowned at birth! Some people really ARE born bad; I wish there was a way to identify this trait and deal with it before the carrier gets unleashed on this already overpopulated planet...
Posted by S.D. Martin on January 3,2013 | 02:45 AM
RE Jeff's comment One key concept recently added to the whole "nature vs nurture" argument: epigenetics. Hormones affected by emotional states flip genetic "switches" that profoundly influence personality development. There is even evidence that the hormones associated with the emotional state of the mother during pregnancy and lactation have epigenetic effects. Thus, while there appear to be physiological reasons for certain social and emotional traits that are destructive to either the reproductive prospects of the individual or their ability to contribute to society in a positive way, they are not necessarily traits that individual humans are born with.
Posted by Thirdeye on January 3,2013 | 09:03 PM
GL Piggy comments on the above article here: http://glpiggy.net/2012/12/31/a-scientist-mugged-by-reality-asks-the-important-questions/ Personally, I the problem isn't our in born nature. It is the ideas and worldview we are raised with, either by our parents or our culture, and whether or not government and society incentivizes our inclinations and choices.
Posted by The Dude on December 31,2012 | 04:10 PM
I have a couple of lingering questions after reading this fascinating article. 1. I wonder what the interactions between the babies and their primary caregiver is like? 12 month olds aren't exactly "blank slates". There's a scientifically recognized difference between kids whose caregivers have been responsive and those whose parents have not been responsive. What effect does that have on the results? 2. The "subject" families in these studies are biased toward parents who are themselves a bit altruistic. We've gotten requests to participate in baby studies, and have actually done a few. There's not exactly a big "reward" for doing it, so you're basically volunteering to help the researchers. That throws a few complications into the mix. First, the babies who participate could be genetically predisposed to altruism. Or, they could have consistently watched their primary caregiver act in an altruistic way for 12 or so months and learned that behavior.
Posted by Jenny K. on December 28,2012 | 08:22 AM
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