Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: The Evolution of Beauty

Full title: The Evolution of Beauty: How Darwin's Forgotten Theory of Mate Choice Shapes the Animal World - and Us
Author: Richard O. Prum
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.3
Genres/categories: Science, Non Fiction, Animals, History, Psychology

Purchase/research links:
A major reimagining of how evolutionary forces work, revealing how mating preferences--what Darwin termed "the taste for the beautiful"--create the extraordinary range of ornament in the animal world.

In the great halls of science, dogma holds that Darwin's theory of natural selection explains every branch on the tree of life: which species thrive, which wither away to extinction, and what features each evolves. But can adaptation by natural selection really account for everything we see in nature?
Yale University ornithologist Richard Prum--reviving Darwin's own views--thinks not. Deep in tropical jungles around the world are birds with a dizzying array of appearances and mating displays: Club-winged Manakins who sing with their wings, Great Argus Pheasants who dazzle prospective mates with a four-foot-wide cone of feathers covered in golden 3D spheres, Red-capped Manakins who moonwalk. In thirty years of fieldwork, Prum has seen numerous display traits that seem disconnected from, if not outright contrary to, selection for individual survival. To explain this, he dusts off Darwin's long-neglected theory of sexual selection in which the act of choosing a mate for purely aesthetic reasons--for the mere pleasure of it--is an independent engine of evolutionary change.
Mate choice can drive ornamental traits from the constraints of adaptive evolution, allowing them to grow ever more elaborate. It also sets the stakes for sexual conflict, in which the sexual autonomy of the female evolves in response to male sexual control. Most crucially, this framework provides important insights into the evolution of human sexuality, particularly the ways in which female preferences have changed male bodies, and even maleness itself, through evolutionary time.
The Evolution of Beauty presents a unique scientific vision for how nature's splendor contributes to a more complete understanding of evolution and of ourselves.
Similar books:

Animals in Translation
by Temple Grandin

The Other End of the Leash
by Patricia B. McConnell

American Buffalo
by Steven Rinella

The Dinosaur Heresies
by Robert T. Bakker

The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons
by Sam Kean

The Naked Ape
by Desmond Morris

Animals Make Us Human
by Temple Grandin

Fruitless Fall
by Rowan Jacobsen

Crazy Like Us
by Ethan Watters

The Once and Future World
by J. B. MacKinnon

Animal Wise
by Virginia Morell

The Social Leap
by William von Hippel

Traffic
by Tom Vanderbilt

At the Water's Edge
by Carl Zimmer

Seeing Voices
by Oliver Sacks

A Fish Caught in Time
by Samantha Weinberg

Rat Island
by William Stolzenburg

Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History
by Dan Flores

The Genius of Dogs
by Brian Hare

Sex at Dawn
by Christopher Ryan