What is (and was) a person? Evidence on historical mind perceptions from natural language


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Date

2023-10

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

An important philosophical tradition identifies persons as those entities that have minds, such that mind perception is a window into person perception. Psychological research has found that human perceptions of mind consist of at least two distinct dimensions: agency (e.g. planning, deciding) and experience (e.g. feeling, hungering). Taking this insight into the semantic space of natural language, we develop a generalizable, scalable computational-linguistics method for measuring variation in perceived agency and experience in large archives of plain-text documents. The resulting text-based rankings of entities along these dimensions correspond to human judgments of perceived agency and experience assessed in blind surveys. We then map both dimensions of mind in historical English-language corpora over the last 200 years and identify two salient trends. First, we find that while women are now described as having similar levels of agency as men, they are still described as more experience-oriented. Second, we find that domesticated animals have gained higher attributions of experience (but not agency) relative to wild animals, especially since the rise of the global animal rights movement in the 1980s.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

239

Pages / Article No.

105501

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Mind; Personhood; Agency; Experience; NLP; Historical psychology; Gender; Animals; Word embeddings

Organisational unit

09627 - Ash, Elliott / Ash, Elliott check_circle

Notes

Funding

190713 - The Ordinary Meaning of Law (SNF)

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