Publication | Closed Access
Psychological Essentialism of Human Categories
376
Citations
16
References
2007
Year
Social PsychologyPsychological EssentialismEducationSocial CategorizationCognitive AnthropologySocial SciencesCategory BoundariesPsychologyCultural PsychologyCategory RepresentationSocial IdentityCognitive ScienceSymbolic InteractionPsychological StructureApplied Social PsychologySocial CognitionCultureCross-cultural PerspectiveEssentialismPhilosophy Of MindPhilosophical Psychology
Psychological essentialism is an ordinary mode of category representation that has powerful social-psychological consequences. This article reviews those consequences, with a focus on the distinctive ways people perceive, evaluate, and interact with members of human categories they essentialize. Why and when people engage in this mode of thinking remain open questions. Variability in essentialism across cultures, categories, and contexts suggests that this mode of representing human categories is rooted in a naturalistic theory of category origins, combined with a need to explain differences that cross category boundaries.
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