Jul 02, 2020
Jean Piaget is one of the most brilliant thinkers I've ever come across. Piaget's theory of constructivism is fascinating (granted that it has its errors like ever great thinker's model) and is still quite influential in child psychology. Piaget, in reality, is a psychoanalyst disguised as an epidemiological philosopher. He uses empirical evidence by observing his children (and many others) throughout their childhood and, when they are able to speak, he engages in psychoanalytic sessions with them. Through these means, Piaget has constructed the developmental stages of the child which are to this day accurate.
This book really feels like Piaget's manifesto on his theories as "The Moral Judgement of the Child", especially towards the last fifty pages, just became a long rant about what previous developmental psychologists got right and wrong. "Play, Dreams, and Imitation in Childhood" fully encapsulates the entire Piagetian method and philosophy so elegantly in a slim 290 pages.
There's also something very transcendental about reading Piaget. It's humbling and maybe even terrifying to see how quickly the child develops. Piaget also reminds us that the child is intelligent, and maybe even more in touch with himself than the adult. We can all learn something from children...