The Inner Eye: Social Intelligence in Evolution
Oxford University Press, 2002 (new edition; first published 1986)
Back Cover
Where
does consciousness come from? What is it? Where is it taking us?
In 1971 Nicholas Humphrey spent three months at Dian Fossey's gorilla
research centre in Rwanda. It was there, among the mountain gorillas that he began to focus on the philosphical and scientific puzzle
that has fascinated him ever since: the problem of how a human being or animal can know what it is like to be itself. The Inner Eye
describes where these original speculations led: to Humphrey's now celebrated theories of the 'social function of intellect' and of
human beings as natural born 'mind-readers'. Easy to read, adorned with Mel Calman's brilliant illustrations, passionately argued,
yet never less than scientifically profound, this book remains the best introduction to new thinking about 'theory of mind' and its
implication for human social life.