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A**N
Deeply intellectual, informative and stimulating
Fair warning: this book is not for everyone. It’s over 1000 pages long, extremely complicated, full of qualifications and nuances, frequently transitions from one topic to the next, and makes you forget almost as much as it makes you learn. But if you can see it all the way to the end, you deserve to feel proud. This book is an encyclopaedic crash course in neuroscience, sociobiology, philosophy and human morality all rolled into one massive treatise seeking to answer the question: do we humans take decisions of our own free will or does our biology and genealogy do it for us? Are we even responsible for our best and worst behaviours; how can we enhance the former and suppress the latter? Predictably, there is no easy answer but Sapolsky provides both the templates and the catalysts to help answer the question as objectively as possible.His erudition, width and depth of knowledge - and the welcome doses of riotous humour - make him as good an author as he is scientist. One wished he did not complicate every issue with a near-infinite supply of opposing, qualifying and modifying examples - even when they are not always central to the theme under discussion - as it leaves one reeling at the end as to what conclusion to actually draw. It does become clearer as you progress but the process would be more friction-less if the author just recognised that most of us (lay people) can’t actually swim underwater. That apart, this is just a delightful book - full of powerful examples, glittering pearls of knowledge, and those indescribably joyous explanations when something you have always ‘known’ turns out to have a deep, scientific basis. It is also a somewhat encouraging book, as far as the future of our species is concerned, as Sapolosky tries to show that over the centuries and millennia of human existence our best behaviours are becoming more common and ubiquitous and our worst ones a little less so.It cannot be ignored however, that global events over the last 5-7 years, since this book was written, are proving somewhat contrary to this premise. There are wars in several regions of the planet, time-honoured institutions like the UN, WTO, ICJ underpinning the practices of so-called “anonymous pro-sociality” are crumbling, Us-Them dichotomies are widening, we seem to be losing the fight against climate change, and so on. Hopefully, some of them will prove to be just temporary wrinkles in an otherwise upward path. If not, Dr Sapolsky will have to produce a revised edition!
A**A
Comprehensive Book
The book is quite comprehensive in covering the basics of human behavior. It might be a little hard to understand if you don’t know basic human biology, but overall, it’s a great book.
S**A
Book review
Little bit damage was there
K**E
Excellent read
A lot of things about the human mind and subconscious thinking and valid reasons to justify why we behave the way we do.
N**I
Behavior, what and why!
The book could be a bible for understanding our own impulses and actions and not just those of others around us. It is technical in the sense that it talks about hormones controlling nervous system. But it not jargon. Anyone ordinary reader, who might have picked up the book, curious to know what's inside, will find it an interesting read. The book could be useful to professionals dealing with human behavior at all levels, including that of psychopaths.
B**R
Here's all your answers on humans and more...
A journey of few years has come to , what feels like a destination.Reading human behavior books I can lay hands on - books by Robert Cialdini, Eric Berne, Viktor Frankl, Richard Thaler, Dan Ariely, Chip & Dan Heath, Daniel Kahneman, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi etc and to have finally found 'Behave' has given an enormous exhilaration. The dots are now connected, fringes merged, edges melded - its big picture finally. A book I suppose I will return time to time.Reading the above sounds more like a thank you note to Robert Sapolsky than a review. I suppose that was the subconscious intent anyway!Edit on Aug 2024 : Ok, few months passed and now I have read few other "full spectrum" human behavior books. One was referred in this book itself - The righteous mind by Jonathan Haidt. It had more human and emotion leanings to it. Then, serendipity led me to 'Humankind: A hopeful history' by Rutger Bergman. The spectrum feels more complete and meaningful now.
C**M
Flower inside the book
Surprise to find a flower inside the book...
K**N
Knowledgeable and informative book.
Knowledgeable and informative book. A bit tough if you are not familiar with basic human biology. But overall great book.
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