Download PDF The Accidental Homo Sapiens Genetics Behavior and Free Will Ian Tattersall Robert DeSalle Books

By Tyrone Mccall on Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Download PDF The Accidental Homo Sapiens Genetics Behavior and Free Will Ian Tattersall Robert DeSalle Books





Product details

  • Hardcover 240 pages
  • Publisher Pegasus Books; 1 edition (April 2, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1643130269




The Accidental Homo Sapiens Genetics Behavior and Free Will Ian Tattersall Robert DeSalle Books Reviews


  • Read most of the book today. Their main thesis is that most traits and behaviors are not categorical, but instead fall along a spectrum (the bell curve). Furthermore, the significant contribution of genetics comes from the cumulative small effects of hundreds or thousands of individual genes. This means it is incredibly unlikely that we can find the “gene for x” trait or behavior. Now I will detail three things that I really disliked about the book.

    1. They characterize sociobiology and evolutionary psychology as “genetic reductionism” (p.72) because the “gene for x” story is mainly fiction. What the authors fail to mention is that evolutionary psychologists do not reduce all behavior to genetics, but instead study how our past adaptations often *partially contribute* to our current unwise behavior. The strawman argument is unconvincing.

    2. Free will is only mentioned twice in the entire book. Both times, the actual point the authors make is that we are not purely programmed by our genes. This is not free will, but instead deterministic decision-making based on some combination of genetic and environmental inputs.

    3. In the final chapter they make a baseless claim that "the sum total of happiness in the world will continue to be approximately the same as the sum total of misery" (p. 191). THIS IS PURE NONSENSE. I could go on but this is pretty much sums it up.
  • At first I was a bit circumspect of the idea of a "bell curve" or "chaos theory" being applied to human evolution. But Tattersall and DeSalle's book--and their clear, lucid writing style--definitely explains how we got to be where we are as a species. And it was not a linear process! The part I found most fascinating was the evolution of our modern brain. We have our "reptilian brain," but as our brain evolved, it wasn't a linear, "thought out" process. Rather, our brains evolved certain attributes as they were needed. Adapting to suit needs. So the end result, though singularly remarkable, as rather ad hoc. And such is our species, both physically and behaviorally, as when we think of our brains, the "mind" can't be ignored, either! I came away from the book was a new understanding and curiosity for the rest of their oeuvre.
  • Had the authors and the narrator taken a moment to think about it, they might have agreed that reading numbers aloud like 660,543,958,332,979,000 digit....by....painful digit is an insult to their listeners.

    A few moments later they are at it again, when the narrator reads text about the 4 letters used to represent the four bases in DNA. The narrator literally reads several sequences aloud like this CGATGGGCTGAACTACGTTTTAGCTCCCTAGGTAC

    And we haven't even gotten through the Prologue!

    At this point listeners start cussing, or laughing, or perhaps jumping in front of the nearest bus in despair! The disregard for the listener is clear, and contemptible.

    I was looking forward to listening since Tattersall in particular has a nice reputation, getting cited occasionally in high quality books on topics related to evolution.

    Life is too short for this accidental homo sapiens to waste time and money on this audio book.

    Could be a good book -- I'll never know.