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Hardcover Lucy's Legacy: Sex and Intelligence in Human Evolution Book

ISBN: 0674000692

ISBN13: 9780674000698

Lucy's Legacy: Sex and Intelligence in Human Evolution

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Book Overview

Alison Jolly believes that biologists have an important story to tell about being human--not the all-too-familiar tale of selfishness, competition, and biology as destiny but rather one of cooperation... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Why are we smart?

Jolly's basic thesis is that the portrayal of evolution as "red in tooth and claw" is overblown. Species survival requires at least as much co-operation as competition. There are continuous compromises made in nature, each of which is as likely to aid in survival of the participants as elimination of opposition would. Jolly isn't attempting to replace competition as the root of evolution so much as temper it. The tempering force is sex. Always a subject of mystery among biologists, the origins of sex remain shrouded in mystery. Only the legacy of its inception becomes clear in hindsight. Sex provides genetic variety and a melange of social orders among animals. According to Jolly, sex generates interactions between individuals and groups that likely wouldn't have arisen otherwise. Jolly argues that the interactions have led to various forms of altruism. In turn, the social "games" needed to maintain co-operation and altruism have generated higher levels of intelligence. Co-operation requires communication, further stimulating intelligence. This is most clearly manifest in the primates, particularly humans, of course. The rise of sociobiology [deemed "evolutionary psychology" by the timid] has added fresh pointers to our natural origins. Jolly is adept at equalizing the contending forces in this field and fending off its more strident critics. In one chapter, she expresses admiration for the growing number and influence of women scholars in the field. She then spends time gently dissecting a "deconstructionist" view of primatology, her own field. Her balanced views and reasonable approach are among the more admirable aspects of this book.Her narrative style is light and conversational. There are even personal asides to keep the presentation from becoming rigid or pedantic. Regrettably, her desire to reach many readers and avoid axe-grinding led her down an unfortunate path. She sprinkles poetry samples throughout the text, many of these of doubtful value to the narrative. Her choice of illustrations is even worse. In charity, we might blame this on faulty editing. The topic is far too important to distract the reader with empty non-sequiturs. She imparts the importance well, but erodes it with these asides. The importance is maintained when you reach her References. This is an admirably complete source list and repays a careful look. It reflects Jolly's aim at reaching the general reader new to the topic. If you are just starting in this area, this book is an exceptional starting point.- Review by stephen a. haines, Ottawa, Canada

a wonderful look at ourselves

Jolly has written one of the most elegant examinations of ourselves from an evolutionary perspective. She dialogues with feminists, biologists and others while crafting a wonderful foray into "sex and intelligence in human evolution" (the book's subtitle). She covers a heterogeneous set of topics, from why to cooperate to how humans give birth. In the spirit of Diamond's The Third Chimpanzee, she shows what excellent writing and a fine choice of subject matter can do when put together. This wide-ranging topical focus leaves the book without an oft-repeated thesis, or a strong idea to take away from reading it. But it does succeed in producing a book well worth recommending.

Excellent introduction into human evolution

Although I originally read this book for Professor Jolly's class, I have since recommended it to friends and family as an excellent, well rounded introduction into human evolution. It tries to examine, in an objective way, the degree to which natural selection has affected both physical and psychological human attributes.Unlike writers such as EO Wilson who seem to argue that science has little if anything to learn from the humanities, Jolly believes that a comprehensive theory of human nature needs to draw on both the sciences and humanities to arrive at a synthetic view. I agree with her view that we cannot reduce humans to their genes, but nor can we ignore the role they play in our behavior.The book is quite well written, and draws liberally on poetry, short stories, and politics as well as science to illustrate her points.

Scentmarks on The Other Side of the Tree

This is an engaging and comprehensive introduction to where primate studies have taken us in the last half century, with a fine elucidation of sociobiology as a theoretical tool. Alison Jolly, a pioneering lemur watcher (as well as Lecturer in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton University and Past President of the International Primatological Society) is particularly attuned to the needs and weaknesses of students and scholars "on the other side of the tree": in the humanities. She poses questions that only someone trained in the biological sciences would (or should) be bold enough to consider seriously, such as--Why sex? Why gender? What is intelligence? Where did it come from? Where is it going? And she considers possible answers clearly and thoroughly and gracefully enough for anyone to appreciate. One's knowledge of the human condition can only be deepened by following this exploration into the history before history.

An excellent overview of human evolution

"Lucy's Legacy" is an impressive book. If you've an interest in how much we've learned about where homo sapiens came from, read it. I'm giving it 4 stars because Jolly does such a great job of providing an overview, starting the beginning of life on earth. I'm not aware of anything in the field with the range of "Lucy's Legacy". Clear writing and a wonderful sense of humor make it easy to read. It's not getting the fifth star because coverage is a bit skimpy in places and because of the comments noted below.If you keep the idea in the back of your head that most of what she writes about is fairly recently discovered while you read "Lucy's Legacy", you can't help but be amazed at the pace with which we're beginning to understand ourselves, even though Jolly doesn't make a big thing of it. Of course she also makes it clear that we don't know far more than we do.And, oh yes, she makes a very good point that it's possible for selfish behavior at the level of genes to result in altruistic behavior by animals.I do have a few criticisms, though they shouldn't discourage anyone from reading the book. They stem mostly from an attempt to do too much in under 450 pages, but her biases and areas of expertise undoubtedly play a role. Here are some samples.First, the bibliography is mostly adequate, but there's too much to cover in one book and it would have been very useful to have pointers to books to go to for further reading in specific areas. Second, important references are missing. Jolly cites work discussed in the excellent Walker/Shipman "Wisdom of the Bones", but fails to include that book. Similarly, she describes Roger Fouts' work with chimps and the personal problems he encountered because of his love for the animals but fails to cite his "Next of Kin. And, amazingly, the discussion of language and linguistics is done without a mention of Noam Chomsky.Third, it's cruel to tell us that DNA's very efficient without explaining how efficiency is being measured.Fourth, though she describes positions on two sides of the sociobiology wars, Jolly's not really fair to what I'll call the Gould camp. It's not, for example, intellectually honest to dismiss Gould's objections on the grounds that we're "programmed to deeply distrust - or even detest - the theory of sociobiology." It's also a jump from quoting Gould and Lewontin as saying theories like it "provided an important basis for the enactment of sterilization laws and restrictive immigration laws by the United States between 1910 and 1930 and also for the eugenics policies which let to the establishment of gas chambers in Nazi Germany" to her claim they were asserting that "proposing biological bases for human behavior leads straight to justifying the gas chambers." Gould wrote what I think was his best book, "The Mismeasure of Man", about the sordid history of testing for intelligence and how theories that came out of suc
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