La conscience de soi et la reconnaissance de soi

p. 135-137

Abstract

Evidences tend to prove that out of the human being, only the great apes like chimpanzees and orang-utans show self-recognition and have a self-concept. This short note discusses two positions about this issue. First, Gallup uses a mark test with his apes and concludes that they were able of self-directed behavior in presence of a mirror. Second, Heyes thinks that the results of Gallup are the consequence of an anaesthetic recovery and claims self-recognition (so defined) is an artifact of this anaesthetization. This short note tries to analyse this polemic by confronting the different arguments.

Text

Download Facsimile [PDF, 949k]

References

Bibliographical reference

Jean-Michel Dumoulin, « La conscience de soi et la reconnaissance de soi », Cahiers d'éthologie, 18 (1) | 1998, 135-137.

Electronic reference

Jean-Michel Dumoulin, « La conscience de soi et la reconnaissance de soi », Cahiers d'éthologie [Online], 18 (1) | 1998, Online since 01 February 2024, connection on 20 September 2024. URL : https://popups.lib.uliege.be/2984-0317/index.php?id=1489

Author

Jean-Michel Dumoulin

Licence en Psychologie. orientation Psychologie cognitive et biologique

Copyright

CC BY-SA 4.0 Deed