“…Children think about and try to enforce category-related prescriptive expectations from early in development (e.g., saying that boys cannot wear pink, that babies should drink milk, and so on). This kind of prescriptive social reasoning is often described as developing in the context of children's early social interactions (Piaget, 1932;Rakoczy & Schmidt, 2013;Rakoczy et al, 2008;Rutland, Killen, & Abrams, 2010;Searle, 1995;Smetana, 1981;Tomasello, 2019a;2019b). Yet, children (and adults) also reason prescriptively outside of the social domain (e.g., thinking that dogs should bark, and that there is something wrong with a dog that does not; Haward et al, 2018;Prasada & Dillingham, 2006;.…”