Abstract
In the present study a two-part animism questionnaire was devised and administered to 200 female undergraduate students who had fairly extensive course backgrounds in science. When these students were asked to classify each of 15 objects as “living” or “nonliving,” 67% (N=134) gave evidence of apparent animistic thought. Yet when the subjects were asked to choose which of several statements reflected their own definition of living, 66% (N=132) claimed that “only plants and animals are living.” Scientific background did not relate to performance on either section of the questionnaire. Results indicate that although the primary orientation of many young adults toward the word living is not a biological one, most college students areable to classify stimuli according to this criterion.
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Received her Ph.D. in lifespan developmental psychology from West Virginia University in 1971. Primary research interest is cognitive functioning after childhood.
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Papalia-Finlay, D.E. The life concept in female college students: An exploratory analysis. J Youth Adolescence 7, 133–139 (1978). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01537521
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01537521