I think they may be heat treated so doubt it....you can try it by soaking a few then putting them on damp kitcehn roll on a plate, put in a plastic bag, seal it and put in a warm place either in the sun or in the airing cupboard. if they sprout then you are good to go, if they don't then you haven't wasted any time to effort.
My first thought was exactly the same as Woofgang's (i.e. the dried peas sold in supermarkets might have undergone some form of heat treatment) but googling 'germinate dried peas' seems to find loads of people saying that it works just fine. e.g.
https://forum.kitchengarden.co.uk/viewtopic.php?t=10289
We used to do this in Infants school with dried peas and beans. We had to bring an empty jam jar in with a dried bean or pea.The teacher would roll some blotting paper and line the jar and put our legume between glass and paper at the bottom of the jar. A drop of water and we could watch our legume start sprouting and develop with a stem and leaves. Fascinating stuff for five year olds.We had races. :-)