Choose quotes font
Children's games constitute the most admirable social institutions. The game of marbles, for instan
Children's games constitute the most admirable social institutions. The game of marbles, for instan
Children's games constitute the most admirable social institutions. The game of marbles, for instan
Children's games constitute the most admirable social institutions. The game of marbles, for instan
Children's games constitute the most admirable social institutions. The game of marbles, for instan
Children's games constitute the most admirable social institutions. The game of marbles, for instan
Next quotes
Jean Piaget:
All morality consists in a system of rules, and the essence of all morality is to be sought for inJean Piaget:
Before playing with his equals, the child is influenced by his parents. He is subjected from his crJean Piaget:
Egocentrism appears to us as a form of behavior intermediate between purely individual and socializJean Piaget:
With regard to moral rules, the child submits more or less completely in intention to the rules laiJean Piaget:
During the first few months of an infant's life, its manner of taking the breast, of laying its heaJean Piaget:
To accustom the infant to get out of its own difficulties or to calm it by rocking it may be to layJean Piaget:
The child of three or four is saturated with adult rules. His universe is dominated by the idea thaJean Piaget:
Childish egocentrism is, in its essence, an inability to differentiate between the ego and the sociJean Piaget:
From the moral as from the intellectual point of view, the child is born neither good nor bad but mJean Piaget:
Play is the answer to the question, 'How does anything new come about?'