Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword, by Louis J. Moses
- Acknowledgments
- Note added in proof
- Part I Comparative and Developmental Approaches to Self-awareness
- Part II The Development of Self in Human Infants and Children
- Part III Self-awareness in Great Apes
- Part IV Mirrors and Monkeys, Dolphins, and Pigeons
- 21 The monkey in the mirror: A strange conspecific
- 22 The question of mirror-mediated self-recognition in apes and monkeys: Some new results and reservations
- 23 Mirror behavior in macaques
- 24 Evidence of self-awareness in the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
- 25 Mirror self-recognition in bottlenose dolphins: Implications for comparative investigations of highly dissimilar species
- 26 Further reflections on mirror-usage by pigeons: Lessons from Winnie-the-Pooh and Pinocchio too
- Part V Epilogue
- Author index
- Subject index
22 - The question of mirror-mediated self-recognition in apes and monkeys: Some new results and reservations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword, by Louis J. Moses
- Acknowledgments
- Note added in proof
- Part I Comparative and Developmental Approaches to Self-awareness
- Part II The Development of Self in Human Infants and Children
- Part III Self-awareness in Great Apes
- Part IV Mirrors and Monkeys, Dolphins, and Pigeons
- 21 The monkey in the mirror: A strange conspecific
- 22 The question of mirror-mediated self-recognition in apes and monkeys: Some new results and reservations
- 23 Mirror behavior in macaques
- 24 Evidence of self-awareness in the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)
- 25 Mirror self-recognition in bottlenose dolphins: Implications for comparative investigations of highly dissimilar species
- 26 Further reflections on mirror-usage by pigeons: Lessons from Winnie-the-Pooh and Pinocchio too
- Part V Epilogue
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
It is the peculiar power of mirrors to show you what is not otherwise there.
– E. L. Doctorow, Billy BathgateThis paper reports further observations, experiments, and methodological considerations concerning mirror-mediated self-recognition and mirrorcorrelated behavior in pigtailed monkeys (Macaca nemestrina) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). We also describe from videotape an instance of apparent self-recognition by a monkey. Last, we discuss behavioral processes we think applicable to the “passing” of the Gallup mark test and to the larger issues of self-awareness and a self-concept.
The empirical facts of mirror-mediated/mark-directed (MM/MD) responding in some chimpanzees and orangutans, but not in gorillas nor in the dozen or more monkey species tested by the well-known Gallup (1970) procedure (hereafter, the “mark test”), have been widely discussed (e.g., Anderson, 1984; Gallup, 1987). A positive mark test is said to imply – even to operationally define – self-recognition, self-awareness, a self-concept, and, ipso facto, consciousness. From there, questions of proximate causes, function, development, and evolution are pursued; species discontinuities are postulated; comparisons with human cognition are made, and searches are prompted for indications of empathy, deception, attributions of mental states, and more. If sentience or self-awareness is attributed to any nonhuman animals, ethical and legal questions of human obligations toward animals are made even more urgent. In short, the importance of this range of issues should find us disquieted that experimental investigations of self-recognition in primates have relied so strongly on tests with mirrors (see discussion by Cheney & Seyfarth, 1990; commentary by Povinelli & deBlois, 1992).
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- Self-Awareness in Animals and HumansDevelopmental Perspectives, pp. 330 - 349Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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