Culture
Prefigures Cognition in Pan/Homo Bonobos
Dr. Sue Savage-Rumbaugh is the first and only scientist
doing language research with bonobos. She joined Great Ape Trust following a
23-year association with the Language Research Center (LRC) at Georgia State
University. At the LRC, Savage-Rumbaugh helped pioneer the use of a number of
new technologies for working with primates. Her breakthrough research with Kanzi – the
first ape to learn language in the same manner as a child – has been documented
in scientific publications and broadcasts throughout the world. The following
is an excerpt from “Culture Prefigures Cognition in Pan/Homo Bonobos” by
Dr. Sue Savage-Rumbaugh, Dr. Pär Segerdhal and Mr. William Fields:
For more than three decades, a group
of bonobos has been intentionally initiated into aspects of human culture by
humans who live, eat, sleep, travel, speak and interact with them during continuous
and direct physical interaction in an environment as free from cages as law will
permit. These interactions are not those that typify most human/ape encounters.
Thus these individuals are not treated in accordance with the common view of “ape
as creature less than human but rather entities whose potential is vast and unrecognized
by our current limited views.
To read the entire scientific article, click here. |