The case for thinking like a child | The Gray Area - April 27, 2026 -
Sean talks with psychologist Alison Gopnik about how children think, learn, experience the world, and why their minds may be more powerful than ours in some crucial ways. They explore the idea that kids are the “research and development” wing of the human species, built for exploration, curiosity, and discovery, while adults are optimized for focus, efficiency, and getting things done. Along the way, they discuss why children notice things we’ve stopped seeing, what we lose when we grow up, and what parenting reveals about love, care, and the nature of intelligence itself.Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO
Host: Sean Illing (@seanilling)
Guest: Alison Gopnik (@AlisonGopnik)
Chapter Titles
00:00 Intro
00:48 The differences between the minds of children and the minds of adults
07:21 Humanity’s long childhood
14:27 Why is it hard for adults to be playful?
17:09 What do we lose when we move from childhood to adulthood?
22:42 Can LLMs think like children?
33:10 How to encourage kids to be kids
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