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Rating:  Summary: excellent in every way Review: Among all of E.O. Wilson's spectacular books, this one is one of my favorites - not just for the substantial content - but for one of the best cover-designed and illustrated books I have ever seen.Everything about this book is top notch and all who were involved should be applauded. This book is an enduring collection of ideas expressed with lucidity and wisdom. Bravo.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent essays Review: I was first introduced to E.O. Wilson when I went on a butterfly count a few years ago. As we were looking for butterflies and counting what we saw, the count leader (who is an incredibly smart naturalist) made a passing refernce to E.O. Wilson. That day I came home and got onto Amazon to find out more. This was the first book I came across and I'm so glad I did. It is filled with about 12 essays on different topics in nature. They're broken down into three groups: Animal Nature, Human Nature (In the Company of Ants is one of these) The Patterns of Nature (The Bird of Paradise: Hunter and Poet is one of these) Nature's Abundance (The Little things that run the world is one of these) The writing style is easy to read, fun, interesting - I learned a lot reading the essays but also just found the reading fun. I love how Wilson pulls back the stories to ideas/concepts that are relevant to us so we can put things in perspective. Great book! Any nature lover would enjoy it
Rating:  Summary: Stimulative reading Review: This book is not as provocative as 'On human nature'. The writing is not as combative, although it has many of the same themes : - human aggression (he does not agree with Konrad Lorenz - even aggression evolves rapidly - and Erich Fromm - humanity is not suicidal -) - the fallacy of ethics (human nature is to a large extent the heritage of a Pleistocene hunter-gatherer existance) - the place of mankind in Gaia (the totality of Life on Earth). He argues clearly that if human beings were to disappear, the world would go on little changed and would heal itself from the damage inflicted by mankind. The only necessary animals,for Gaia and also for the human species, are the invertebrates. Perhaps the most controversial point of the book are his arguments in defence of racial differences in the human populations, based on genetic components. But as always with E. O. Wilson, his argumentation is based on solid research and clear thinking.
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