The Moral Animal: The New Science of Evolutionary PsychologyEvery so often the world of ideas is shaken by what the philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn famously dubbed a "paradigm shift". As Robert Wright shows in this pathbreaking book, such a shift is occurring now - one that will change the way people see their lives and the way they choose to live their lives. From the work of evolutionary biologists and of scholars all across the social sciences, a new science called evolutionary psychology is emerging, and with it a radically revised view of human nature and the human mind. In its light, the oldest and most basic questions look different and wholly new questions arise. Are men and women really built for monogamy? What kinds of self-deception are favored by evolution, and why? How and why do childhood experiences make a person more or less conscientious? What is the evolutionary logic behind office politics - or politics in general? Why is there a love-hate relationship between siblings? When, if ever, is love truly pure? Is the human sense of justice - and of just retribution - innate? Does it truly serve justice? This lucidly written book is set in a fitting context: the life and work of Charles Darwin. Wright not only shows which of Darwin's ideas about human nature have survived the test of time, he retells - from the perspective of evolutionary psychology - the stories of Darwin's marriage, his family life, and his career ascent. All three look as they have never looked before. The Moral Animal challenges us to see ourselves, for better or worse, under the clarifying lens of evolutionary psychology. Wright argues powerfully that, though many of our "moral sentiments" have a deep biological basis, so does our tendency to fool ourselvesabout our goodness. If we want to live a truly moral life, we must first understand what kind of animal we are. |
Other editions - View all
The Moral Animal: Why We Are, the Way We Are: The New Science of ... Robert Wright Limited preview - 2010 |
The Moral Animal: Why We Are, the Way We Are: The New Science of ... Robert Wright Limited preview - 1995 |
Common terms and phrases
adaptive ancestral environment animal Autobiography basic Beagle behavior better Betzig biological Bowlby chapter Charles Charles Darwin cheating chimpanzees chimps conscience conscious Cosmides cultures cynicism Daly and Wilson Darwin wrote Darwinian Darwinian paradigm Descent designed divorce doctrine Emma evolution evolutionary psychology example explain fact favor feel female Freud friends genes genetic interest happiness hierarchy Hooker human nature hunter-gatherer Huxley impulses kin selection kind least less LLCD logic Lyell male Margo Wilson marriage married mate mental Mill mind modern monogamy moral code natural selection naturalistic fallacy non-zero-sumness noted offspring organisms parental investment person political polygyny primates question reason reciprocal altruism reproductive Robert Trivers seems selfishness sense serotonin sexual siblings social society Sociobiology sort species status strategy suggests Sulloway tend tendency there's things TIT FOR TAT Tooby Trivers unconscious utilitarian values Victorian Waal Wallace wife woman women Yeroen
References to this book
Ties that Bind: A Social Contracts Approach to Business Ethics Thomas Donaldson,Thomas W. Dunfee No preview available - 1999 |
The Robot's Rebellion: Finding Meaning in the Age of Darwin Keith E. Stanovich No preview available - 2005 |