Allorecognition is the ability of an individual organism to distinguish its own tissues from those of another. It manifests itself in the recognition of antigens expressed on the surface of cells of non-self origin. Allorecognition has been described in nearly all multicellular phyla. — Wikipedia
The mirror test—sometimes called the mark test, mirror self-recognition (MSR) test, red spot technique, or rouge test—is a behavioral technique developed in 1970 by American psychologist Gordon Gallup Jr. as an attempt to determine whether an animal possesses the ability of visual self-recognition. The MSR test is the traditional method for attempting to measure physiological and cognitive self-awareness. However, agreement has been reached that animals can be self-aware in ways not measured by the mirror test, such as distinguishing between their own and others' songs and scents. [...] Very few species have passed the MSR test. — Wikipedia
A wide range of species has been reported to fail the test, including several species of monkeys, giant pandas, and sea lions. — Wikipedia
Thus, a monkey, the whole monkey, isn't self-aware (insofar as the mirror self-recognition test is concerned) but its cells are self-aware. Paradox! — TheMadFool
Mirror Self-Recognition Test — TheMadFool
A dog knows if it accidentally bites its own tail instead of the tail of another dog, even though it fails the self-recognition test. — Pantagruel
she doesn’t know what actually means — javi2541997
Well, you don't actually know what it is like "to be a dog," — Pantagruel
I guess my dog doesn't wonder "how is to be like a human" — javi2541997
it is so impressive. — javi2541997
defense habits — javi2541997
Isn't there a difference in kind between these two types of recognition though? — Pantagruel
Come to think of it, I haven't heard of humans being capable of picking out their own clothes from a jumbled pile of clothes that includes the apparel of others using just smell. :chin: Assuming of course that each one of us has a unique scent. — TheMadFool
Nevertheless, when we take the entire body as a unit, the cellular allorecognition can be safely interpreted as the body being self-aware. — TheMadFool
It disappointed me a bit the fact dogs failed the mirror test... I would bet some money to they have at least some awareness but it turns out not. — javi2541997
edit: so I did a little digging and this article supports this interpretation Dogs may be more self-aware... — Pantagruel
Although dogs can't identify themselves in the mirror, they still have some level of self-awareness and ace other self-recognition tests. They can recognize their own odor, and recall memories of specific events, Earth.com reports.
It disappointed me a bit the fact dogs failed the mirror test — javi2541997
The former being an exact and the latter (because of the admixture of the physical) an inexact or approximate science. — Pantagruel
Suppose there's a being that's made of and thus emits neutrinos. Neutrinos pass through anything and everything - it simply can't be reflected back at this being and so, this being would never see faerself in the way we see ourselves in the mirror kind courtesy of visible light let alone recognize itself. There's no image of itself; how can it ever then recognize itself such a feat only being possible with an image of the self. — TheMadFool
Yes, unless neutrinos in create some kind of disruption in the fabric of spacetime that the being can perceive as its own "mirror-image". It's a good example — Pantagruel
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