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Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human MP3 CD – Unabridged, April 9, 2013
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In Catching Fire, one of the most ambitious arguments about human evolution since Darwin’s Descent of Man, renowned primatologist Richard Wrangham makes the claim that learning to cook food was the hinge on which human evolution turned. Eating cooked food, he argues, enabled us to evolve our large brains, and cooking itself became a primary focus of human social activity—in short, cooking made us the social, intelligent, and sexual species we are today. Path-breaking and provocative, Catching Fire will fascinate anyone interested in our ancient origins—or in our modern eating habits.
"Catching Fire is convincing in argument and impressive in its explanatory power. A rich and important book.” —Michael Pollan, author of In Defense of Food and The Omnivore’s Dilemma
“This is a daringly unorthodox book, and one that might just transform the way we understand ourselves.” —Sunday Times (UK)
“The ambition of Wrangham’s theory gives it great appeal: Cooking is a powerful biological force and the universal activity around which the rest of human history—the households and tribes, the migrations and wars, the religion and science—arranged itself. But the added treat of the I-cook-therefore-I-am idea is the counterintuitive light it sheds on one of our most intense cultural preoccupations—living the right life by eating naturally." —Slate
“An exhilarating book.” —The Times (UK)
“A cogent and compelling argument.” —Washington Post
“Absolutely fascinating.” —Nigella Lawson
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBrilliance Audio
- Publication dateApril 9, 2013
- Dimensions5.25 x 0.5 x 6.75 inches
- ISBN-101469298708
- ISBN-13978-1469298702
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Product details
- Publisher : Brilliance Audio; Unabridged edition (April 9, 2013)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 1469298708
- ISBN-13 : 978-1469298702
- Item Weight : 3.21 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.5 x 6.75 inches
- Customer Reviews:
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Not once, the author considers the reality of the men risking their lives and dying in the hunts, as the reason for the bargaining of being cooked by their women. It's just a marxist oppression regime according to the author, everything is about the power exercised by the men.
Never once, the author considered the willingness of men to take risks and actual deaths occurring until today, where more than 90% of work related deaths, are men.
It's a shame when supposedly scientific works are tainted with this kind of non-sense left leaning politics and agenda.
Drawing on a number of food studies, ethnographic data, as well as his own primatological research, Dr. Wrangham argues that the transition from Homo habilis to Homo erectus would be impossible without a regular supply of cooked food. Citing the general unpalatability and undigestibility of a chimp's diet for modern humans, the seeming energy deficit seen in raw food proponents, the chemical changes that occur in foods that are cooked and the subsequent absorption of the unlocked calories, and the increasing reduction of our early ancestors' gastrointestinal tract through the millennia, he is convinced that the utilization of fire for cooking has its origins much farther in the past than the current evidence from the archaeological record tells us. The discrepancy between the archaeological record and his claim is around 1 million years, an incredibly large gap to bridge. In the latter third of the book, Wrangham makes the tangential argument that cooking is also what spurred our cultural evolution, e.g., concepts such as pair-bonding and the sexual division of labor, through the creation of a sort of "protection racket" that guards women from food thieves and ensures men a ready supply of food.
While I did enjoy reading Dr. Wrangham's book and readily admit that he makes some interesting and valid points, I am not convinced of the veracity of his hypothesis, especially in the light of more recent research on the variability and actions of the microbiome present in the digestive tracts of animals. In presenting his case for the need of cooked food for an increased energy supply in late habilines/early erectus, he ignores the fact that much of the successive change in the musculoskeletal morphology leading to our species had the effect of allowing us to conserve energy through increased efficiency of movement.
This does not necessarily mean that Dr. Wrangham is incorrect. However, the gaps in his arguments, coupled with the gaps in our own knowledge, have effectively rendered the cooking hypothesis unfalsifiable. There very well may come a time when the available physical evidence supports his position, but for now the only appropriate response is one of interest, skepticism, and further research.
This book is very well-researched. It is packed with information that the average person will find very interesting and eye opening. We give it all five stars.
Many college students will be assigned Catching Fire and will probably relegate it to the “Read it Later” pile. They may even put it in the “Too long, didn’t read” pile. They will be missing out on a lot of interesting reading.
We suggest that anyone who wants to know more about how diet evolved, how nutritionists determine how many calories are in food, or how we got certain gender roles when it comes to household duties, read this book. You will be glad you did.
Our daughter had this book in her personal library. It had been required reading at her university.
We are disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255.
Top reviews from other countries
Levi-Strauss, in his The Raw and the Cooked: Introduction to a science of mythology (Pimlico), wrote that fire marks the transition from nature to culture. Few would dispute that the cuisine of any nation is a major trademark of its cultural somplexity and sophistication. And cooking, in its many diverse methods (grilling, steaming, boiling, baking etc) is an essential part of any major cuisine in the world.
Our bodies evolved because we learned to cook: besides a smaller stomach and larger brain, we lost our climbing ability (no need to climb if fire can protect camp on the ground) in favor of better running skills. And we have much smaller teeth compared to our ancestors who did not cook.
Cooking also played an essential role in making mankind a carnivore, as it makes it efficient to digest and store large amount of animal proteins in a way that would have been unthinkable with just raw meat. But for vegetarians there is some consolation as well: cooking made it possible to digest many more types of roots.
Finally, this book dwelves on the social implications of cooking: how it shaped the man/woman relationship in the house, and how it made it easier to use meals as a social event. Some cultures have peculiar (to us) habits: among the Bonerif of Papua, a woman will sleep with every man in the village except her brothers before finally getting married; but the moment she feeds a man she is irrevocably considered his wife!
I'd recommend this book first, then "Demonic Males" followed by "The Goodness Paradox" - I feel it presents the subject in the most logical order.
Overall, an enjoyable and informative read, I'd really like to give 4.5 stars or 9/10 for this book.









