Authors
Cathleen O’Grady, Christian Kliesch, Kenny Smith, Thomas C Scott-Phillips
Publication date
2015/7/1
Journal
Evolution and Human Behavior
Volume
36
Issue
4
Pages
313-322
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Recursive mindreading is the ability to embed mental representations inside other mental representations e.g. to hold beliefs about beliefs about beliefs. An advanced ability to entertain recursively embedded mental states is consistent with evolutionary perspectives that emphasise the importance of sociality and social cognition in human evolution: high levels of recursive mindreading are argued to be involved in several distinctive human behaviours and institutions, such as communication, religion, and story-telling. However, despite a wealth of research on first-level mindreading under the term Theory of Mind, the human ability for recursive mindreading is relatively understudied, and existing research on the topic has significant methodological flaws. Here we show experimentally that human recursive mindreading abilities are far more advanced than has previously been shown. Specifically, we show that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C O'Grady, C Kliesch, K Smith, TC Scott-Phillips - Evolution and Human Behavior, 2015