Abstract This paper examines childhood as a developmental window into the emergence of worldhood. Previous work in this research program has argued that worldhood depends upon structures such as significance, perspective, temporality, and horizons of possibility. The present investigation asks how these structures emerge in the first place. Rather than treating childhood as an incomplete version of adulthood, the paper approaches it as a stage in which the formation of worldhood remains visible. It argues that significance precedes conceptual understanding, that a meaningful world begins to emerge before a fully articulated sense of self, and that the child enters an already existing yet unfinished world. Through repetition, participation, memory, and social interaction, some patterns of significance become reinforced while others fade from view. Reinforcement stabilises significance, introduces selection among possibilities, and contributes to the emergence of dominant organisations of experience. The paper proposes that childhood reveals worldhood not as a fixed structure but as an ongoing developmental achievement. What appears self-evident and natural in adulthood is shown to be the outcome of processes through which significance becomes organised, reinforced, stabilised, and transformed. By examining these processes, childhood provides insight into a broader philosophical question that extends beyond developmental psychology: how a world becomes possible.
Erik Tönsberg (Wed,) studied this question.