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Who would have guessed that arguably today’s most original thinker in evolutionary theory could possibly have led the extraordinary life Robert Trivers recounts in these pages. We are taken on a wild trip from inspired meditations on the biology of self deception, through a steamy Jamaican underworld, to Black Panthers in California, to frank appraisals of distinguished or over-rated scientists, the whole adding up to a disarmingly frank and utterly unique memoir of a rollercoaster of a life. --

RICHARD DAWKINS, bestselling author of  'The Selfish Gene' and 'The God Delusion'

 

“Robert Trivers is not just a brilliant evolutionary thinker but a world-class raconteur, adventurer, kibitzer, people-watcher, jester, and provocateur. This memoir is filled with sharp and hilarious observations about the living world, not least a certain species of hairless primate, not least a certain member of that species named Robert Trivers.” –

STEVEN PINKER
,best-selling author of 'How the Mind Works' and 'The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Decline'd 

 

“It would not be hyperbole to say that Robert Trivers is one of the most important evolutionary theorists since Charles Darwin. But contrary to the image most people have of theoretical scientists as stodgy intellectuals holed up in their offices buried in paper, Trivers' memoir reveals a man whose life has been wild in every sense of the word. A lust for life doesn’t begin to sum up a career devoted to truth, courage, and the audacity to think what no one else has thought, and to act in ways few others would dare (you’ll even learn how to defend yourself in a knife fight). If that were not enough, Trivers is witty, clever, and compassionate. This book is destined to become a classic in scientific autobiography." --

MICHAEL SHERMER, Editor in Chief, The Skeptic

 


 

 Dr. Robert Trivers is an American evolutionary biologist and

 sociobiologist, who was a Professor of Anthropology and Biological Sciences at Rutgers University. Trivers proposed the theories of "reciprocal altruism" (1971), 'parental investment' (1972), 'facultative sex ratio determination' (1973), and 'parent–offspring conflict' (1974). He has also contributed by explaining self-deception as an adaptive evolutionary strategy (first described in 1976) and discussing intragenomic conflict.

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