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猿类拥有文化,但可能并不知道它们拥有文化。

Apes have culture but may not know that they do.

作者信息

Gruber Thibaud, Zuberbühler Klaus, Clément Fabrice, van Schaik Carel

机构信息

Department of Comparative Cognition, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel Neuchâtel, Switzerland.

Department of Comparative Cognition, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel Neuchâtel, Switzerland ; School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews St Andrews, UK.

出版信息

Front Psychol. 2015 Feb 6;6:91. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00091. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

There is good evidence that some ape behaviors can be transmitted socially and that this can lead to group-specific traditions. However, many consider animal traditions, including those in great apes, to be fundamentally different from human cultures, largely because of lack of evidence for cumulative processes and normative conformity, but perhaps also because current research on ape culture is usually restricted to behavioral comparisons. Here, we propose to analyze ape culture not only at the surface behavioral level but also at the underlying cognitive level. To this end, we integrate empirical findings in apes with theoretical frameworks developed in developmental psychology regarding the representation of tools and the development of metarepresentational abilities, to characterize the differences between ape and human cultures at the cognitive level. Current data are consistent with the notion of apes possessing mental representations of tools that can be accessed through re-representations: apes may reorganize their knowledge of tools in the form of categories or functional schemes. However, we find no evidence for metarepresentations of cultural knowledge: apes may not understand that they or others hold beliefs about their cultures. The resulting Jourdain Hypothesis, based on Molière's character, argues that apes express their cultures without knowing that they are cultural beings because of cognitive limitations in their ability to represent knowledge, a determining feature of modern human cultures, allowing representing and modifying the current norms of the group. Differences in metarepresentational processes may thus explain fundamental differences between human and other animals' cultures, notably limitations in cumulative behavior and normative conformity. Future empirical work should focus on how animals mentally represent their cultural knowledge to conclusively determine the ways by which humans are unique in their cultural behavior.

摘要

有充分证据表明,一些猿类行为能够通过社会方式传播,并且这可能导致特定群体的传统形成。然而,许多人认为动物传统,包括大猩猩的传统,与人类文化在根本上有所不同,这主要是因为缺乏累积过程和规范一致性的证据,但也可能是因为目前对猿类文化的研究通常局限于行为比较。在这里,我们建议不仅在表面行为层面,而且在潜在认知层面分析猿类文化。为此,我们将猿类的实证研究结果与发展心理学中关于工具表征和元表征能力发展的理论框架相结合,以在认知层面描述猿类文化与人类文化之间的差异。目前的数据与猿类拥有可以通过重新表征来获取的工具心理表征这一观点相一致:猿类可能以类别或功能模式的形式重新组织它们关于工具的知识。然而,我们没有发现文化知识元表征的证据:猿类可能不理解它们自己或其他猿类对其文化持有信念。基于莫里哀笔下人物的“茹尔丹假说”认为,由于猿类在表征知识能力方面存在认知局限,而表征知识能力是现代人类文化的一个决定性特征,它允许对群体当前规范进行表征和修改,所以猿类在不知道自己是文化生物的情况下表达它们的文化。因此,元表征过程的差异可能解释了人类文化与其他动物文化之间的根本差异,尤其是在累积行为和规范一致性方面的局限。未来的实证研究工作应聚焦于动物如何在心理上表征它们的文化知识,以最终确定人类在文化行为上独特的方式。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e816/4319388/ede384781df3/fpsyg-06-00091-g001.jpg

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