Frans de Waal looks at primates (primarily, chimpanzees and bonobos) at some of human nature—in particular, sex, violence and morality.
The stories about ape behavior are really fascinating, and may tell us a bit about our own behavior. De Waal suggests that some of our behavior has counterparts in chimpanzees and bonobos, the latter being more aggressive (even violent, cruel) and competitive, and the second being more social.
I didn’t like De Waal’s extrapolations into human politics and society, or his snide remarks towards Dawkins’ The Selfish Gene, apparently mostly because he did not like the title. And the circular reasoning, “Morality needs emotions, because Mr. Spocks’s pure-logic morality doesn’t feel right”.
So, in summary—Overall, an enjoyable read, and De Waal is best when he discusses apes.
(Note: primates such as bonobos, chimpanzees and gorilla’s are apes, they get annoyed when you call them monkeys)
Read Frans de Waal’s Our inner ape
Frans de Waal looks at primates (primarily, chimpanzees and bonobos) at some of human nature—in particular, sex, violence and morality.
The stories about ape behavior are really fascinating, and may tell us a bit about our own behavior. De Waal suggests that some of our behavior has counterparts in chimpanzees and bonobos, the latter being more aggressive (even violent, cruel) and competitive, and the second being more social.
I didn’t like De Waal’s extrapolations into human politics and society, or his snide remarks towards Dawkins’ The Selfish Gene, apparently mostly because he did not like the title. And the circular reasoning, “Morality needs emotions, because Mr. Spocks’s pure-logic morality doesn’t feel right”.
So, in summary—Overall, an enjoyable read, and De Waal is best when he discusses apes.
(Note: primates such as bonobos, chimpanzees and gorilla’s are apes, they get annoyed when you call them monkeys)