Jean Piaget Biography
Jean Piaget Biography
Jean Piaget Biography
Over the course of his six-decade career in child psychology, Piaget also identified four
stages of mental development, called Schema. The first is the "sensorimotor stage,"
which involves learning through motor actions, and takes place when children are 02
years old. During the "preoperation stage," children aged 37 develop intelligence by
using their natural intuition. During the "concrete operational stage," children 811
develop cognitively through the use of logic that is based on concrete evidence. "Formal
operations," the fourth and final stage, involves 12-to-15-year-olds forming the ability to
think abstractly. Piaget called his collective theories on child development "Piagets
Genetic Epistemology."
Death and Legacy
Jean Piaget died of unknown causes on September 16, 1980, in Geneva, Switzerland.
He was 84 years old. His body rests at the Cimetire des Plainpalais.
Piaget is responsible for developing entirely new fields of scientific study, including
cognitive theory and developmental psychology. The recipient of the prestigious
Erasmus (1972) and Balzan (1978) prizes, he summed up his passion for the ongoing
pursuit of scientific knowledge with these words: "The current state of knowledge is a
moment in history, changing just as rapidly as the state of knowledge in the past has
ever changed and, in many instances, more rapidly."