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Article

Non-verbal rationality? 2-year-old children, dogs and pigs show unselective responses to unreliability, but to different degrees

Details

Citation

Blakey KH, Rafetseder E, Melis G, Veit A, Amelung K, Freudensprung F, Kovacs K & Vir¨¢nyi Z (2025) Non-verbal rationality? 2-year-old children, dogs and pigs show unselective responses to unreliability, but to different degrees. Child Development. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.70020

Abstract
Some philosophers argue that reflection is key to rational thinking. By tying reflective thinking to language, they struggle to account for minimally verbal infants and exclude non-human animals. This study assessed processing of undermining defeaters¡ªa basic form of reflective thinking¡ªin 36 two-year-old British children (13 female; Mage = 30.4 months, 98% White), 39 dogs (18 female), and 21 pigs (9 female), tested between 2022 and 2023. Informants acted on two screens: one informant reliably indicated a rewarded location, the other informant did not. Informants switched actions twice, prompting subjects to infer their reliability. Willingness to follow informants¡¯ indications did not differ between reliable and unreliable informants. However, reduced following in later trials suggests a response to uncertainty or an undermining defeater.

Keywords
belief revision; rational thinking; reflection

StatusEarly Online
Funders
Publication date online31/08/2025
Date accepted by journal02/07/2025
URL
ISSN0009-3920
eISSN1467-8624

People (2)

Dr Giacomo Melis

Dr Giacomo Melis

Senior Research Fellow, Philosophy

Dr Eva Rafetseder

Dr Eva Rafetseder

Associate Professor, Psychology

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