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The Moral Animal: Why We Are, the Way We Are: The New Science of Evolutionary Psychology Paperback – August 29, 1995
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- Print length496 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVintage
- Publication dateAugust 29, 1995
- Dimensions5.21 x 0.99 x 7.99 inches
- ISBN-100679763996
- ISBN-13978-0679763994
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Product details
- Publisher : Vintage; Reprint edition (August 29, 1995)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 496 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0679763996
- ISBN-13 : 978-0679763994
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.21 x 0.99 x 7.99 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #326,173 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #104 in Evolutionary Psychology (Books)
- #1,094 in Medical General Psychology
- #7,185 in Personal Transformation Self-Help
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robert Wright is a contributing editor of The New Republic, a Slate.com columnist, and a visiting scholar at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the cofounder of www.bloggingheads.tv, runs the web-based video project www.meaningoflife.tv, and lives in Princeton, NJ, with his wife and two daughters.
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Customers find the book insightful, logical, and intelligent. They describe the writing style as well-written, easy to read, and accessible to the layman. Opinions are mixed on the esoteric content, with some finding it eye-opening and interesting, while others say it's dull and scientific.
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Customers find the book insightful, profound, and logical. They say it provides good theories of why we act the way we do. Readers also mention the scientific content is clear and refined.
"...This perspective can bring clarity and understanding. There will be speculation but it will be grounded speculation...." Read more
"...This 466-page tome provides a thorough explanation of evolutionary psychology, and how it descended from the theory of evolution...." Read more
"...It is very interesting to see how a few concepts of Darwin's theory, like status hierarchy, parental investment, kin selection and so on, proves to..." Read more
"...It also is a great read on how Darwinism came to be...." Read more
Customers find the writing style well-written, easy to read, and accessible to the layman. They also appreciate the great quotes and simple, friendly language.
"The Moral Animal, written in 1994 - the year I was born - reads with a level of pertinence that is ahead of its time...." Read more
"...Fortunately for readers, Wright is a gifted story teller and writer...." Read more
"...style or disagree with some of the conclusions but this is a very readable book that explains so much of how we came to be who we are...." Read more
"...particular related to moral and philosophical issues, require a lot of reasoning to follow. Anyway, it is an excellent book...." Read more
Customers find the humor in the book outrageous, acerbic, and poignant. They also say the author uses an entertaining and instructive device.
"...he is SHARP, acerbic, poignant, and his style of unadorned intellectual criticism is hilarious!..." Read more
"This compelling, amusing, and carefully argued book sheds light on a theory of human nature that has devastating explanatory power, but which has..." Read more
"...The author uses a very entertaining and instructive device: explaining human morality using the specific guinea pig of Charles Darwin himself...." Read more
"...Very documented with scientific research, well written and outrageously funny." Read more
Customers find the book eye-opening, interesting, and poignant. They say it's a fascinating description of human nature and how natural selection shaped it. However, some readers find the content dull, sophomoric, and confronting.
"...In sum, this book is a fascinating description of human nature, and how natural selection shaped it. ###" Read more
"...His answer is utilitarian, exceptionally well thought out and a little confronting...." Read more
"...When he does, Boy! he is SHARP, acerbic, poignant, and his style of unadorned intellectual criticism is hilarious!..." Read more
"...psychology, fascinates me, I found this effort to be sophomoric in the extreme...." Read more
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Now of course evolutionary psychology makes us look at the seemingly heightened level of morality of the Victorian era with a skeptical eye. It's an evolutionary advantage to fit in and even prosper in the social environment you are in, and that's the underlying reason why people seek respect and social status. The norm in Victorian times was to approach your neighbors with upmost charity and respect. Never uttering insults and always willing to go out your way to help if possible. Perhaps maybe it was because the towns in England in the 19th century were small, and everybody knew each-other? It was a much bigger disadvantage to be rude because a slight on your reputation can spread to everybody quickly. This is diametric to the city life today, where people are criticized as being indifferent, irreverent, and impolite. Subconsciously whether we deny it or not, we behave different depending on if we know we are going to see somebody again or if they are in our "inner circle".
Understanding the subject matter is important because when we inherit an evolutionary psychological view we gain the capability to view our behavior as a species in a perspective we may have not considered beforehand. This perspective can bring clarity and understanding. There will be speculation but it will be grounded speculation. For example, why are we inclined to care about the opinions of others that we know we will never see again? Part of the explanation can be that in our ancestral environment we were always much more likely to encounter the same person again. Our understanding of evolutionary psychology will have a huge impact on our understanding and mending morality in the future. Through this new paradigm, we get some clarification that men for example are not "pigs" or "wrong" because they want to instinctually mate with as many women as possible. Also, women are not "evil-creatures" because they cheat sometimes. That is not to say that each example is morally "right", especially when taken ad-nasauem. But perhaps these understandings will garner sympathy and understanding for our human nature. In a sense, our understanding of this subject will bring on worry and legal issues. But remember, it is not an evolutionary advantage for males and females to inherit these behaviors in full. And as far as the law and policy goes, understanding animal/human nature will go a long way in helping reshape things. An example is poverty and why thanks to our understanding of human nature it is justifiable to set up programs to reduce it. There's a psychological effect on income disparity, and though I won't get into it here it does beget an interesting discussion. How about homosexuality? Of course once we can get past the highly ignorant and depressing discussion of whether it's a "choice" or not, we can try to understand why homosexuality developed in species. And hopefully it can render the contemporary discussion of whether being gay is "right" or "wrong" as obsolete. And this goes for many other things as we come to terms with human nature. Remember, most of our modern evolutionary history and ancestry took place tens of thousands of years before any recorded history. Our modern society is only a small speck of time and many of our "crazy" or "irrational" behaviors can only be understood by the aforementioned time period of human evolution. My suggestion: buy the book. It's a must-read.
Speaking of Charles Darwin, Wright does an in-depth analysis of Darwin, including his family and his work, applying the insights of the new science to Darwin’s behavior, and identifying what matters Darwin got right and wrong. Fortunately for readers, Wright is a gifted story teller and writer. Readers who want a briefer introduction to the subject, however, will find it in Evolutionary Psychology 101 by Glen Geher (2013).
There is far too much material in Moral Animal to summarize here, so I will just pick a few tidbits I found of interest. One is how Darwin outmaneuvered a younger scientist who discovered the theory of evolution before Darwin had published his own theory. Another is the different rates of breastfeeding for sons and daughters, depending upon the mother’s social class. Third, Wright makes a provocative argument for polygyny, where men can be married to several women simultaneously. He contends that women would be better off if they had this option, while low-status men would be worse off. We have a de facto form of polygyny, he says, with serial monogamy, where wealthy men consecutively monopolize the fertile years of several young women.
Here are a few pithy Wright quotes that illustrate the contents of Moral Animal:
“The man-sized ego was produced by the same forces that created the peacock’s tail: sexual competition among males.”
“The keen sensitivity with which people detect the flaws of their rivals is one of nature’s wonders. Honest evaluation is beyond the reach of most mortals.”
“Being a person’s true friend means endorsing the untruths he holds dearest.”
“No doctrine heightens one’s consciousness of hidden selfishness more acutely than the new Darwinian paradigm. If you understand the doctrine, buy the doctrine, and apply the doctrine, you will spend your life in deep suspicion of your motives. That is the first step toward correcting the moral biases built into us by natural selection.”
“If the theory of natural selection is correct, then essentially everything about the human mind should be intelligible in these terms.”
“We grow indignant about the behavior of distinct groups of people (nations, say, or political parties) whose interests conflict with a distinct group to which we belong.”
“Given that self-interest was the overriding criterion of our design, we are a reasonably considerate group of organisms.”
“Human beings are a species splendid in their array of moral equipment, tragic in their propensity to misuse it, and pathetic in their constitutional ignorance in its misuse.”
“It is now clearer than ever how the moral sentiments are used with brutal flexibility, switched on and off in keeping with self-interest.”
In sum, this book is a fascinating description of human nature, and how natural selection shaped it. ###







