why do children enjoy idealism more than cynicism? … Teenagers who act as if they could still get together with their friends and split off to form their own tribe, enjoy cynicism aimed at current authority figures and idealism aimed at their new tribe.
See the theories of Jean Piaget. Reading-age children are moving from the preoperational stage (2-7) to the concrete operational stage (7-11). The preoperational stage includes magical thinking and egocentrism. The concrete operational stage includes logic and social considerations. The last whisps of magical thinking plus early tones of (rules plus people equal good) make for idealism. The issue is not idealistic books or their lack, which sounds pretty blank-slate-y. The abstract reasoning stage (11-16) includes noticing the difference between is and ought, life and rules, and cynicism is one thing that can follow. So is tribe-starting idealism.
See the theories of Jean Piaget. Reading-age children are moving from the preoperational stage (2-7) to the concrete operational stage (7-11). The preoperational stage includes magical thinking and egocentrism. The concrete operational stage includes logic and social considerations. The last whisps of magical thinking plus early tones of (rules plus people equal good) make for idealism. The issue is not idealistic books or their lack, which sounds pretty blank-slate-y. The abstract reasoning stage (11-16) includes noticing the difference between is and ought, life and rules, and cynicism is one thing that can follow. So is tribe-starting idealism.