- Thu Feb 08, 2018 3:23 pm
#43745
Hi CJJ,
This is one passage where it may help to break the argument down into constituent parts. The argument being made in this paragraph is this:
Hypothesis: Human beings, both children and adults, know their own thoughts directly, noninferentially, and infallibly, but know the thoughts of others only inferentially.
Experimental Results: Children cannot describe their thoughts nearly as accurately as adults can.
Psychologists' Conclusion: Both children and adults know their own thoughts only inferentially, just as if they were trying to puzzle out the thoughts of others; adults become "experts" and make inferences so quickly they no longer can be recognized as inferences.
So to answer your question directly, the psychologists are positing that the thoughts of both children and adults are not known directly, even by those having the thoughts, but are always understood inferentially. It's just that adults have a lot more practice and have gotten really good at making those inferences so quickly that we didn't even realize that they were inferences.
Hope this clears things up!