Details
Reviews & Quotes
"I think the book is excellent. Easy to read – both because of its writing style and the layout in relatively brief sections. This makes it a pleasure to read – and the subject is so exhilarating!
A book to read and then keep for reference.'"
Open Parachute blog (Fall 2010)
"“An enormous achievement. Wherever I landed, whether it was the origin of ‘emergence,’ Einstein’s religion, the death of Platonic views of nature, or the strangely self-contradictory worldview of Julian Huxley, I learned something new. Wise, authoritative, and entertaining!” RICHARD MILNER, Author, Darwin’s Universe: Evolution from A to Z"
RICHARD MILNER
Author, Darwin’s Universe: Evolution from A to Z
(2010)
"Carneiro (American Museum of Natural History) traces the notion of a thoroughgoing belief in unalloyed supernaturalism toward an attitude in which naturalism played an increasingly greater role from the Paleolithic to contemporary scientific thought. The soul had been seen early on as a supernatural, incorporeal, and immaterial entity that survives death. In fits and starts, the naturalistic tendency progressed throughout the centuries, leading to a more thoroughgoing, scientific present. With the onset of modernity, fewer people believed in supernaturalism, and contemporary atheism became a credible worldview. Carneiro references some of the most recent and important thought arising from the latest atheistic battery: Dawkins, Dennett, Harris, and Hitchens, in particular, in regard to the controversy about the God gene. The great debate today is between sociobiologists and cultural anthropologists to determine how much of human behavior and thought is genetically programmed and how much is culturally determined. Carneiro is firmly in the cultural camp, and longs for the day when humankind simply pursues truth and no longer seeks religious solace. Summing Up: Recommended. All academic levels/libraries."
G. M. Smith, Delaware County Community College
Choice
(January 2011)
"...this book is interesting and informative. It is a nicely written contribution to understanding the evolution of competing ideas.'"
Kenneth M. Weiss, Penn State University
Journal of Anthropological Research
(2011)
"This book is a fine example of how pure anthropology can not only be relevant but powerful!
The Evolution of the Human Mind is a skillfully written book that you won’t regret buying. It is destined to be a classic. Carneiro makes direct statements that writers love to cite (and readers love to read). His publisher, Eliot Werner Publications, Inc., is proving to be one of the most interesting small presses to come around in awhile-- spend some time looking over what they have on offer!'"
dirtbrothers.org
(2011)
