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      • Construing value development from ontogenetic and phylogenetic developmental perspectives enables an integrated understanding of values as central individual, as well as cultural constructs, which are dynamic, multi-layered and complex rather than static, mono-layered and bald.
      academic.oup.com/book/7143/chapter/151694667
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  2. Construing value development from ontogenetic and phylogenetic developmental perspectives enables an integrated understanding of values as central individual, as well as cultural constructs, which are dynamic, multi-layered and complex rather than static, mono-layered and bald.

    • Contributors

      Tobias Brosch, Department of Psychology, and Swiss Center...

  3. May 23, 2011 · We bring together neuroevolutionary and developmental perspectives on the information processing and neural mechanisms underlying empathy and caring, and show that they are grounded in multiple interacting systems and processes.

    • J Decety, Margarita Lvovna Svetlova
    • 10.1016/j.dcn.2011.05.003
    • 2012
    • Dev Cogn Neurosci. 2012 Jan; 2(1): 1-24.
  4. Aug 21, 2017 · The phylogenetic perspective explains why there is a relatively similar, pan-cultural hierarchy of values across societies. The ontogenetic perspective examines the processes through which ...

    • Lilach Sagiv, Sonia Roccas, Jan Cieciuch, Jan Cieciuch, Shalom H. Schwartz
    • 2017
  5. Nov 6, 2017 · It is suggested that the phylogenetic perspective explains the pan-cultural agreement in value hierarchies and the ontogenetic perspective explains both the assimilation of the cultural...

  6. This paper will present evidence to support ontogenetic and phylogenetic parallels and draw from these comparisons to further illuminate our understanding of micro and macro human development.

    • 46KB
    • 6
  7. Ontogenetic development can be conceptualized as the portion of physical, cognitive, emotional, and social development that can be attributed to experiences with the environment and the individuals within the environment. In contrast, phylogenetic development refers to the portion of physical, cognitive, emotional, and social development that ...

  8. This is no less true, we argue, for phylogeny. Knowing the evolutionary (and sociocultural) his-tory of a species can help explain present and future behavior, and may, in some cases, provide insight into problem behavior (e.g., child abuse, male-on-male vio-lence, rape, reading/math disabilities).