The Red Queen: Sex & the Evolution of Human Nature
"It is impossible to understand human nature without understanding how it evolved..."
THIS BOOK looks at all sorts of behavior – both human and animal – with
the objective of explaining
what's going on by referring to the processes of sex and evolution.
And it's
a beauty...the sort of rare
book which leaves you quite sure that a whole realm of things which you didn't previously understand are
suddenly
explicable.
Why sex? Why intelligence? Why monogamy? These types of
fundamental questions are addressed
with firm logic, and with a wealth of evidence presented concisely (and often humorously) from all over
the animal kingdom. Perhaps
even more importantly the answers are mostly surprising, and yet easily capable of replacing the
conventional scientific explanation
which you – like your reviewer – did not think in need of an update.
Here's
an example:
You might well think that human beings evolved intelligence because of the increased
survival rates of competent
toolmakers. What comes as a surprise is the persuasive case that we grew intelligence in an evolutionary
arms race with the opposite
sex. We needed intelligence not to survive as individuals, but to survive as pro-created
genes.
The
Red Queen offers nothing to do with the nonsense of creationism, or bookish debates between
opinionated professors. It's
respectable up-to-date science, superbly presented, with fascinating twists and turns. Read it for fun,
and peel back another layer of
the onion of natural existence.
So, what is this review doing here, on a
site which is apparently about
books on money? It's here because there's something about the science which is genuinely universal. The
central theme running through
the book is competition, embedded in human nature by genes, and how it appears in the most surprising
aspects of our behavior. If you
are serious about competing with other humans in the surprisingly subtle art of accumulating wealth,
then The Red Queen has a
logic about it which will let you see patterns previously hidden from you.
By the way – the Red Queen is
an Alice in Wonderland metaphor. As I recall in that chapter, everyone was running as fast as
they can just to stand
still.
See what I mean about its application to wealth?