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Daily Inspiration Quote by Jean Piaget

"The more the schemata are differentiated, the smaller the gap between the new and the familiar becomes, so that novelty, instead of constituting an annoyance avoided by the subject, becomes a problem and invites searching"

About this Quote

Piaget is quietly arguing that curiosity isn’t a personality trait so much as an infrastructure project. The mind that has built more internal “schemata” - those organizing templates for how the world works - doesn’t just know more. It experiences change differently. When your categories are crude, anything unfamiliar hits like a siren: noise, threat, the kind of novelty you swat away to restore equilibrium. But as your mental map gains detail, the unknown stops feeling like a foreign country and starts looking like an unmapped neighborhood. The distance between “what I’ve seen” and “what I’m seeing” shrinks.

That’s the subtext: expertise doesn’t eliminate surprise; it domesticates it. Piaget flips the usual story where learning happens because we encounter something new. Here, the capacity to learn is what makes the new tolerable, even enticing. Novelty becomes “a problem” - not in the everyday sense of hassle, but in the technical sense of a puzzle the organism is now equipped to work on. It “invites searching” because the mind can sense there’s a fit to be found, a tweak or expansion that will integrate the anomaly.

Context matters. Piaget’s developmental psychology is obsessed with how children move from blunt, rigid models of reality to flexible, differentiated ones. He’s also pushing back against the idea of learning as simple absorption. Growth is active: the subject doesn’t accept the world; it interrogates it. The line reads like a diagnosis of why boredom and intellectual vitality cluster where they do - not in the stimuli, but in the architecture meeting them.

Quote Details

TopicLearning
Source
Verified source: The Construction of Reality in the Child (Jean Piaget, 1955)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The more the schemata are differentiated, the smaller the gap between the new and the familiar becomes, so that novelty, instead of constituting an annoyance avoided by the subject, becomes a problem and invites searching. (Last chapter reproduced online; exact page not shown (likely § I “Assimilation and Accommodation” in the concluding chapter)). This is a verbatim match in a primary-source translation of Piaget’s work (translated by Margaret Cook, 1955) hosted by Marxists Internet Archive, which reproduces the final chapter. Many quote-aggregation sites point to later reprints (e.g., a 2013 Routledge edition listing p. 354), but the quote demonstrably appears at least as early as the 1955 English translation. I did not verify the earliest (original-language) French publication date from within the accessible sources in this search session, so the “first published” date globally could be earlier in French; however, the earliest verified publication for this exact English wording is 1955 in Cook’s translation.
Other candidates (1)
The Construction Of Reality In The Child (Jean Piaget, 2013) compilation99.9%
... The more the schemata are differentiated, the smaller the gap between the new and the familiar becomes, so that n...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Piaget, Jean. (2026, February 10). The more the schemata are differentiated, the smaller the gap between the new and the familiar becomes, so that novelty, instead of constituting an annoyance avoided by the subject, becomes a problem and invites searching. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-more-the-schemata-are-differentiated-the-78433/

Chicago Style
Piaget, Jean. "The more the schemata are differentiated, the smaller the gap between the new and the familiar becomes, so that novelty, instead of constituting an annoyance avoided by the subject, becomes a problem and invites searching." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-more-the-schemata-are-differentiated-the-78433/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The more the schemata are differentiated, the smaller the gap between the new and the familiar becomes, so that novelty, instead of constituting an annoyance avoided by the subject, becomes a problem and invites searching." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-more-the-schemata-are-differentiated-the-78433/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.

More Quotes by Jean Add to List
Piaget on Differentiated Schemata and Curiosity
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About the Author

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Jean Piaget (August 9, 1896 - September 16, 1980) was a Psychologist from Switzerland.

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