%0 Journal Article %T ChildrenĄ¯s Judgments of Epistemic and Moral Agents: From Situations to Intentions %A J. Kiley Hamlin %A Melissa A. Koenig %A Valerie Tiberius %J Perspectives on Psychological Science %@ 1745-6924 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1745691618805452 %X ChildrenĄ¯s evaluations of moral and epistemic agents crucially depend on their discerning that an agentĄ¯s actions were performed intentionally. Here we argue that childrenĄ¯s epistemic and moral judgments reveal practices of forgiveness and blame, trust and mistrust, and objection or disapproval and that such practices are supported by childrenĄ¯s monitoring of the situational constraints on agents. Inherent in such practices is the understanding that agents are responsible for actions performed under certain conditions but not others. We discuss a range of situational constraints on childrenĄ¯s early epistemic and moral evaluations and clarify how these situational constraints serve to support childrenĄ¯s identification of intentional actions. By monitoring the situation, children distinguish intentional from less intentional action and selectively hold epistemic and moral agents accountable. We argue that these findings inform psychological and philosophical theorizing about attributions of moral and epistemic agency and responsibility %K development %K children %K social cognition %K thinking %K reasoning %K judgment %K philosophy %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1745691618805452