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The Social Conquest of Earth Hardcover – Illustrated, April 9, 2012
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From the most celebrated heir to Darwin comes a groundbreaking book on evolution, the summa work of Edward O. Wilson's legendary career.
Where did we come from? What are we? Where are we going? In a generational work of clarity and passion, one of our greatest living scientists directly addresses these three fundamental questions of religion, philosophy, and science while “overturning the famous theory that evolution naturally encourages creatures to put family first” (Discover magazine). Refashioning the story of human evolution in a work that is certain to generate headlines, Wilson draws on his remarkable knowledge of biology and social behavior to show that group selection, not kin selection, is the primary driving force of human evolution. He proves that history makes no sense without prehistory, and prehistory makes no sense without biology. Demonstrating that the sources of morality, religion, and the creative arts are fundamentally biological in nature, Wilson presents us with the clearest explanation ever produced as to the origin of the human condition and why it resulted in our domination of the Earth’s biosphere. 90 illustrations- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLiveright
- Publication dateApril 9, 2012
- Dimensions6.5 x 1.2 x 9.6 inches
- ISBN-100871404133
- ISBN-13978-0871404138
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Editorial Reviews
Review
― Paul Bloom, New York Times Book Review
"... a sweeping account of the human rise to domination of the biosphere, rounded out with broad reflections on art, ethics, language and religion."
― Jennifer Schuessler, New York Times
"Religion. Sports. War. Biologist E.O. Wilson says our drive to join a group―and to fight for it―is what makes us human."
― Newsweek
"Wilson has done an impressive job of pulling all this evidence together and analyzing it. His interdisciplinary approach, his established scholarship, and his willingness to engage hot-button issues are all much in evidence in The Social Conquest of Earth…. His reflections on this subject are varied, original, and thought provoking―as is the rest of his book."
― Carl Coon, The Humanist
"E. O. Wilson’s passionate curiosity―the hallmark of his remarkable career―has led him to these urgent reflections on the human condition. At the core of The Social Conquest of Earth is the unresolved, unresolvable tension in our species between selfishness and altruism. Wilson brilliantly analyzes the force, at once creative and destructive, of our biological inheritance and daringly advances a grand theory of the origins of human culture. This is a wonderful book for anyone interested in the intersection of science and the humanities."
― Stephen Greenblatt, author of The Swerve: How the World Became Modern
"...a sweeping argument about the biological origins of complex human culture. It is full of both virtuosity and raw, abrupt assertions that are nonetheless well-crafted and captivating... it is fascinating to see such a distinguished scientist optimistic about the future."
― Michael Gazzaniga, Wall Street Journal
"Once again, Ed Wilson has written a book combining the qualities that have brought his previous books Pulitzer Prizes and millions of readers: a big but simple question, powerful explanations, magisterial knowledge of the sciences and humanities, and beautiful writing understandable to a wide public."
― Jared Diamond, Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs and Steel
"Wilson’s newest theory...could transform our understanding of human nature―and provide hope for our stewardship of the planet.... [His] new book is not limited to the discussion of evolutionary biology, but ranges provocatively through the humanities.... Its impact on the social sciences could be as great as its importance for biology, advancing human self-understanding in ways typically associated with the great philosophers."
― Howard W. French, The Atlantic
"A monumental exploration of the biological origins of the Human Condition!"
― James D. Watson
"The Social Conquest of Earth is a huge, deep, thrilling work, presenting a radically new but cautiously hopeful view of human evolution, human nature, and human society. No one but E. O. Wilson could bring together such a brilliant synthesis of biology and the humanities, to shed light on the origins of language, religion, art, and all of human culture."
― Oliver Sacks
"Starred review. Never shy about tackling big questions, veteran evolutionary biologist Wilson (The Creation: An Appeal to Save Life on Earth) delivers his thoughtful if contentious explanation of why humans rule the Earth... Wilson succeeds in explaining his complex ideas, so attentive readers will receive a deeply satisfying exposure to a major scientific controversy."
― Kirkus Reviews
"The Social Conquest of the Earth has set off a scientific furor... The controversy is fueled by a larger debate about the evolution of altruism. Can true altruism even exist? Is generosity a sustainable trait? Or are living things inherently selfish, our kindness nothing but a mask? This is science with existential stakes."
― Jonah Lehrer, New Yorker
"Starred review. With bracing insights into instinct, language, organized religion, the humanities, science, and social intelligence, this is a deeply felt, powerfully written, and resounding inquiry into the human condition."
― Booklist
"That Wilson provides nimble, lucid responses to the three core questions, speaks volumes about his intellectual rigor. That he covers all of this heady terrain in less than 300 pages of text speaks volumes about his literary skill."
― Larry Lebowitz, Miami Herald
"Wilson frames The Social Conquest of Earth as a dialogue with painter Paul Gauguin, who penned on the canvas of his 1897 Tahitian masterpiece: “Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?” ...Wilson attempts to answer Gauguin... by embracing the existential questioning of the humanities without sacrificing the “unrelenting application of reason” at the core of empirical science."
― Alyssa A. Botelho, The Harvard Crimson
"The Harvard University naturalist and Pulitzer Prize winner angered many colleagues two years ago, when he repudiated a concept within evolutionary theory that he had brought to prominence. Known as kin selection or inclusive fitness, the half-century-old idea helped to explain the puzzling existence of altruism among animals. Why, for instance, do some birds help their parents raise chicks instead of having chicks of their own? Why are worker ants sterile? The answer, according to kin selection theory, has been that aiding your relatives can sometimes spread your common genes faster than bearing offspring of your own.
In The Social Conquest of Earth, Wilson offers a full explanation of his latest thinking on evolution. Group dynamics, not selfish genes, drive altruism, he argues: “Colonies of cheaters lose to colonies of cooperators.” As the cooperative colonies dominate and multiply, so do their alleged ”altruism” genes. Wilson uses what he calls “multilevel selection”―group and individual selection combined―to discuss the emergence of the creative arts and humanities, morality, religion, language and the very nature of humans. Along the way, he pauses to reject religion, decry the way humans have despoiled the environment and, in something of a non sequitur, dismiss the need for manned space exploration. The book is bound to stir controversy on these and other subjects for years to come."
― Sandra Upson and Anna Kuchment, Scientific American
"Pretty much anything Wilson writes is well worth reading, and his latest, The Social Conquest of Earth, is no exception… Read the master biologist himself in this marvelous book..."
― Michael Shermer, The Daily
"With his probing curiosity, his dazzling research, his elegant prose and his deep commitment to bio-diversity, Pulitzer Prize-winning biologist (The Ants) and novelist (The Anthill) Edward O. Wilson has spent his life searching for the evolutionary paths by which humans developed and passed along the social behaviors that best promote the survival of our species. His eloquent, magisterial and compelling new book offers a kind of summing-up of his magnificent career.... While not everyone will agree with Wilson’s provocative and challenging conclusions, everyone who engages with his ideas will discover sparkling gems of wisdom uncovered by the man who is our Darwin and our Thoreau."
― Henry L. Carrigan, Jr., BookPage.com
"Biologist E. O. Wilson’s brilliant new volume, The Social Conquest of Earth, could more aptly be entitled ‘Biology’s Conquest of Science’. Drawing on his deep understanding of entomology and his extraordinarily broad knowledge of the natural and social sciences, Wilson makes a strong case for the synthesis of knowledge across disciplines. Understanding the biological origin of what makes us human can help us to build better theories of social and psychological interaction; in turn, understanding how other social species have evolved may help us to better understand the origin of our own. But the main reason that Wilson’s book is successful is that he also brings into biology the best of what social science has to offer."
― James H. Fowler, Nature Magazine
"An ambitious and thoroughly engaging work that’s certain to generate controversy within the walls of academia and without… Provocative, eloquent and unflinchingly forthright, Wilson remains true to form, producing a book that’s anything but dull and bound to receive plenty of attention from supporters and critics alike."
― Colin Woodard, Washington Post
""Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?” Those famous questions, inscribed by Paul Gauguin in his giant Tahitian painting of 1897, introduce The Social Conquest of Earth. Their choice proclaims Edward O Wilson’s ambitions for his splendid book, in which he sums up 60 distinguished years of research into the evolution of human beings and social insects."
― Clive Cookson, Financial Times
"Wilson is a brilliant stylist, and his account of the rise of Homo sapiens and our species’ conquest of Earth is informative, thrilling, and utterly captivating."
― Rudy M. Baum, Chemical & Engineering News
"What Wilson ends up doing is so profound that the last eight chapters… could stand alone as a separate book, because what he ends up doing is no less than defining human nature itself."
― Robert Knight, Washington Independent Review of Books
"I just finished The Social Conquest of Earth, a fabulous book."
― President Bill Clinton, New York Times
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Liveright; Illustrated edition (April 9, 2012)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0871404133
- ISBN-13 : 978-0871404138
- Item Weight : 1.37 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1.2 x 9.6 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #747,126 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #189 in Creationism
- #900 in General Anthropology
- #2,562 in History & Philosophy of Science (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Regarded as one of the world’s preeminent biologists and naturalists, Edward O. Wilson grew up in south Alabama and the Florida Panhandle, where he spent his boyhood exploring the region’s forests and swamps, collecting snakes, butterflies, and ants—the latter to become his lifelong specialty. The author of more than twenty books, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning "The Ants" and "The Naturalist" as well as his first novel "Anthill," Wilson, a professor at Harvard, makes his home in Lexington, Massachusetts.
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Customers find the content eye-opening, consistent with reality, and courageous. They also say the book is very readable for anyone interested in exploring the big picture of religion.
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Customers find the content eye-opening, inspiring, and convincing. They also say it's an extraordinary achievement of scientific research, scholarship, and writing. Readers say the book is well geared to a general audience and provocative. They say it presents a very special, personal look at human nature.
"...Wilson's work is well geared to a general audience and he very rarely goes outside of what might reasonably be expected from such an audience...." Read more
"...This book is transformative - some of Wilson's specific interpretations will be challenged but what's new about that - he has taken on an enormous..." Read more
"...This is a complex book; provocative; more interesting in a few places than in most places, for me...." Read more
"Dr. Wilson gives an outstanding synthesis of social organisms and shows us just how unique and fascinating we humans are as a species...." Read more
Customers find the book very readable for anyone interested in exploring the big picture. They also say the writing is lucid and stylish, and the content is eye-opening. Readers also mention that the key points are crystal clear.
"...The logical and simply explained chapter `Insects take the giant leap' is a key to understanding one of the most interesting aspects of biology...." Read more
"...So: this is not a good book. It is quite readable, but it's full of outdated or wrong science...." Read more
"...but the main message of the book is clear, powerful and worth reading." Read more
"...Conquest of Earth" - like most of Wilson's books, it is very well written and contains a great deal of carefully researched information, ranging..." Read more
Customers find the overall content amazing and a great introduction to E. O. Wilson's writing.
"This is an amazing work...." Read more
"Started off really promising...but then completely lost me with the in-depth analysis of insects combined with the explanation of or defense for why..." Read more
"This is an extraordinary work. Wilson demonstrates that he is one of the greatest thinkers of our era, and this is clear to the lay person...." Read more
"...A must read for everyone. It is brilliant." Read more
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The main argument: Since the dawn of self-awareness we human beings have struggled to understand ourselves. This struggle has found form in religion, philosophy, art and, most recently, science. The most pivotal turning point in science's quest to understand humanity came with Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection in the mid 19th century. While the application of this theory to understand human behaviour has taken time (and engendered a great deal of controversy), enough progress has now been made to outline the story in full, and to fill in several of the details. It is just this task that legendary biologist E.O. Wilson takes up in his new book `The Social Conquest of Earth'.
For Wilson, understanding humanity must begin with an understanding of how we came to be the ultrasocial species that we are. Drawing upon evidence from other eusocial species (such as bees, wasps, termites and ants--the latter of which Wilson has spent much of his career studying), as well as numerous sciences focused in on humanity and its past, Wilson recreates this story. According to the author, the story reaches its first major turning point when our ancestors began establishing home-bases at which they raised their young, and near which they foraged and scavenged for food. This development itself was largely a result of a genetic modification that led our ancestors to rely more and more on meat in their diet (and was greatly spurred on by, if not entirely dependent upon, the ability to control fire, which fire was used to establish more lasting campsites).
Once human beings had established nests, environmental pressures began selecting for traits that increasingly drew group members into cooperative relationships with one another (which cooperation was beneficial in such enterprises as hunting expeditions). This added cooperation not only contributed to the extent to which these early humans could reap resources from the environment, but also helped them in competition with other groups--especially in warfare. The benefits of cooperation and cohesion in allowing groups to out-compete other groups eventually allowed group-level selection to add a layer of tribalist sentiment to the members of our species (which tribalist sentiment draws from us a deep attachment to our in-groups, and a corresponding mistrust and contempt for members of out-groups). This tribalist sentiment eventually set the stage for the development of the first religions. The cooperative and tribalist sentiments that evolved during this time ultimately explains why our psyches are torn between selflessness and selfishness, virtue and vice. (On the topic of group-level selection, it turns out that this theory has been out of favour in the scientific community for over 40 years, and a big part of Wilson's purpose here is to resurrect the theory, and reestablish its credibility.)
Backing up in our story just a bit, for our in-group cooperation to occur, added mental equipment was needed (and evolved) that allowed humans to understand each others' intentions and work together to achieve goals. This added mental ability drew upon earlier increases in brain capacity that our ancestors had used first for life in the trees, and later for life on the ground, to fashion rudimentary tools. Eventually, the added mental capacity evolved into the ability to understand abstraction, and to use arbitrary symbols for communication, thus leading to the evolution of language.
Once the capacity for abstraction and language were established, the capacity for culture exploded and our ancestors were set on the fast track that led to our current way of life. Specifically, the onset of language led to the development of religion, art and music, and all of the other trappings of culture that we know and enjoy today. Wilson takes us through each of them one by one, and the process of gene-culture co-evolution that acted upon them, in order to help us understand how this process unfolded. Later, the explosion of culture led to technology that eventually gave rise to agriculture, and then to the rise of chiefdoms, and finally states and the first true civilizations.
Wilson's work is well geared to a general audience and he very rarely goes outside of what might reasonably be expected from such an audience. On the rare occasions when he does, he is sure to follow this up with a simplified summary of his line of thought. Also, Wilson occasionally strays outside of his story to moralize and (at the end) prognosticate on the future, and at times these efforts seem awkward and out of place. Again, though, these forays are few and far between, and many will no doubt enjoy them. A full summary of the book is available here: An Executive Summary of Edward O. Wilson's 'The Social Conquest of Earth'
From a human perspective, the different mechanisms of tribalism are examined and its causes are analysed, pointing the finger past religion to competition for resources. An examination of the phenomenon of eusociality in insects, while fascinating in its own right, lends insights for human behaviour and societies. The reader is taken on an expertly guided tour of contemporary theories in social evolution, sometimes a little theoretical but easy enough to get your head around. The logical and simply explained chapter `Insects take the giant leap' is a key to understanding one of the most interesting aspects of biology. Similarly, `The forces of social evolution' sums up the gains and losses of the last few fifty years of research in this area, essentially comparing the merits of group selection and kin selection theory.
The final parts of this book ask `What are we?' and `Where are we going?', collating information provided earlier or from referenced arguments to examine the roles and importance of language, culture, morality and creativity. Insights abound and set the stage for Wilson's final chapter 'A new enlightenment' which achieves two objectives: it shows that scientific enquiry can lead us to the big answers, and offers a lucid, optimistic and compelling synthesis of what really matters and where to next for human society. This book is transformative - some of Wilson's specific interpretations will be challenged but what's new about that - he has taken on an enormous topic and provided a synthesis unequalled in scope and contemporary relevance. I am pleased to see this point is drawn out by the significant and ranging commentary offered by the reviews at this site.



