Manusia Purba TernyataTidak Pernah Melihat Wajahnya Sendiri

How did humans recognize themselves before mirrors existed? For hundreds of thousands of years, our ancestors lived without modern mirrors. Yet they still developed identity, self-awareness, and complex social relationships. In this documentary you'll discover: -Why prehistoric humans rarely saw their own faces. -Gordon Gallup's famous Mirror Test. -Why babies recognize themselves only after about 18 months. -Charles Horton Cooley's Looking Glass Self theory. -Why photos often feel "wrong." -How evolution shaped the way humans perceive themselves. This video combines psychology, anthropology, neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and scientific research into one fascinating story. Scientific References -Gallup, G.G. Jr. (1970). Science. -Charles Horton Cooley (1902). -Daniel Povinelli. -Lewis & Brooks-Gunn. -Philippe Rochat. If you enjoy documentaries about psychology, evolution, science, and anthropology, don't forget to Subscribe. 00:00 How Did Humans Recognize Their Faces Before Mirrors? 00:37 The History of Mirrors 01:24 Gordon Gallup's Mirror Test 02:13 Animals That Pass the Mirror Test 02:53 Why Ancient Humans Didn't Need Mirrors 03:40 Looking Glass Self Explained 04:25 Why Photos Feel Strange 04:53 Anthropology Evidence 05:29 Social Media & Self Image 06:39 Daniel Povinelli's Experiment 07:24 How Self Awareness Develops 08:07 Why Dogs Fail the Mirror Test 08:46 Evolution of Human Faces 09:22 Final Thoughts #Science #Psychology #HumanEvolution #Anthropology #MirrorTest #SelfAwareness #Neuroscience #Documentary #History #Evolution #MindBlowing #AncientHumans #Education #Curiosity #learning mirror test,gordon gallup,self awareness,self recognition,human evolution,ancient humans,anthropology,psychology,neuroscience,looking glass self,charles horton cooley,self consciousness,evolutionary psychology,prehistoric humans,history of mirrors,science documentary,why humans recognize themselves,identity,brain evolution,mirror recognition,documentary,educational science