New York Times bestsellerΒ Β β’ Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book PrizeΒ Β β’ One of the Washington Post's 10 Best Books of the Year
βItβs no exaggeration to say that Behave is one of the best nonfiction books Iβve ever read.β βDavid P. Barash, The Wall Street Journal
"It has my vote for science book of the year.β βParul Sehgal, The New York Times
"Immensely readable, often hilarious...Hands-down one of the best books Iβve read in years. I loved it." βDina Temple-Raston, The Washington Post
From the bestselling author of A Primate's Memoir and the forthcoming Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will comesΒ a landmark, genre-defining examination of human behavior and an answer to the question: Why do we do the things we do?
Behave is one of the most dazzling tours dβhorizonΒ of the science of human behavior ever attempted. Moving across aΒ range of disciplines, Sapolskyβa neuroscientist and primatologistβuncovers the hidden story of our actions. Undertaking some of ourΒ thorniest questions relating to tribalism and xenophobia, hierarchy andΒ competition, and war and peace, Behave is a towering achievementβaΒ majestic synthesis of cutting-edge research and a heroic explorationΒ of why we ultimately do the things we do . . . for good and for ill.
“"[Sapolsky] weaves science storytelling with humor....[His] big ideas deserve a wide audience and will likely shape thinking for some time."-- Publishers Weekly (starred review) "[Sapolsky] does an excellent job of bringing together the expansive literature of thousands of fascinating studies with clarity and humor....A tour-de-force." -- Library Journal (starred review)”
One of The Washington Post's 10 Best Books of 2017
"SapolskyΒ has created an immensely readable, often hilarious romp through the multiple worlds of psychology, primatology, sociology and neurobiology to explain why we behave the way we do. It is hands-down one of the best books Iβve read in years. I loved it." βDina Temple-Raston, The Washington Post
βItβs no exaggeration to say that Behave is one of the best nonfiction books Iβve ever read.β βDavid P. Barash, The Wall Street Journal
βA quirky, opinionated and magisterial synthesis of psychology and neurobiology that integrates this complex subject more accessibly and completely than ever . . .Β a wild and mind-opening ride into a better understanding of just where our behavior comes from. Darwin would have been thrilled.β βRichard Wrangham, The New York Times Book Review
β[Sapolsklyβs] new book is his magnum opus, but is also strikingly different from his earlier work, veering sharply toward hard science as it looms myriad strands of his ruminations on human behavior. The familiar, enchanting Sapolsky tropes are hereβhis warm, witty voice, a sleight of hand that unfolds the mysteries of cognitionβbut Behave keeps the bar high . . . . A stunning achievement and an invaluable addition to the canon of scientific literature, certain to kindle debate for years to come.β βMinneapolis Star Tribune
βA masterly cross-disciplinary scientific study of human behavior: What in our glands, our genes, our childhoods explains our speciesβ capacity for both altruism and brutality? This comprehensive and friendly survey of a βbig sprawling mess of a subjectβ is leavened by an impressive data-to-silly joke ratio. It has my vote for science book of the year.β βParul Sehgal, New York Times
βA monumental contribution to the scientific understanding of human behavior that belongs on every bookshelf and many a course syllabus . . . It is a magnificent culmination of integrative thinking, on par with similar authoritative works, such as Jared Diamondβs Guns, Germs, and Steel and Steven Pinkerβs The Better Angels of Our Nature.β βMichael Shermer, American Scholar
βBehave is the best detective story ever written, and the most important. If you've ever wondered why someone did somethingβgood or bad, vicious or generousβyou need to read this book. If you think you already know why people behave as they do, you need to read this book. In other words, everybody needs to read it. It should be available on prescription (side effects: chronic laughter; highly addictive). They should put Behave in hotel rooms instead of the Bible: the world would be a much better, wiser placeβΒ βKate Fox, author of Watching the English
βMagisterial . . . This extraordinary survey of the science of human behaviour takes the reader on an epic journey . . . Sapolsky makes the book consistently entertaining, with an infectious excitement at the puzzles he explains . . . a miraculous synthesis of scholarly domains.β βSteven Poole, The Guardian
βRarely does an almost 800-page book keep my attention from start to finish, but if anyone can save evolutionary biology from TED talkers and pop-science fabulists, it might be Sapolsky . . . . Behave ranges at great length from moral philosophy to social science, genetics to Sapolskyβs home turf of neurons and hormonesβbut all of it is aimed squarely at the question of why humans are so awful to each other, and whether the condition is terminal.β βVulture
βRobert Sapolsky's students must love him. In Behave, the primatologist, neurologist and science communicator writes like a teacher: witty, erudite and passionate about clear communication. You feel like a lucky auditor in a fast-paced undergraduate course, where the implications of fascinating scientific findings are illuminated through topical stories and pop-culture allusions.β βNatureΒ
βSapolskyβs book shows in exquisite detail how culture, context and learning shape everything our genes, brains, hormones and neurons do.β βTimes Literary Supplement
βBehave is like a great historical novel, with excellent prose and encyclopedic detail. It traces the most important story that can ever be told.β βEdward O. Wilson
βTruly all-encompassing . . . detailed, accessible, fascinating.β βThe Telegraph
βA wide-ranging, learned survey of all the making-us-tick things that, for better or worse, define us as human . . . . An exemplary work of popular science, challenging but accessible.β βKirkus Reviews, starred
β[Sapolsky] weaves science storytelling with humor . . . . [His] big ideas deserve a wide audience and will likely shape thinking for some time.β βPublishers Weekly (starred review)
β[Sapolsky] does an excellent job of bringing together the expansive literature of thousands of fascinating studies with clarity and humor . . . . A tour-de-force.β βLibrary Journal (starred review)
βSapolsky finds not the high moral drama of the soul choosing good or evil but rather down-to-earth biology . . . a remarkably encyclopedic survey of the sciences illuminating human conduct.β
βBooklist(starred review)
βRead Robert Sapolskyβs marvelous book Behave and youβll never again be surprised by the range and depth of our own bad behavior.Β We all carry the potential for unconscious biases, to be damaged by our childhoods and map that damage onto our own loved ones, and to form the tribal βUsβ groups that treat outsiders as lesser βThems.βΒ But to read this book is also, marvelously, to be given the hope that we have much more control of those behaviors than we think. And Behave gives us more than hopeβit gives us the knowledge of how to act on that aspiration, to manifest more of our best selves and less of our worst, individually and as a society. Thatβs very good news indeed.βΒ βCharles Duhigg, author of The Power of Habit and Smarter Faster Better
"As wide as it is deep, this book is colorful, electrifying, and moving. Sapolsky leverages his deep expertise to ask the most fundamental questions about being humanβfrom acts of hate to acts of love, from our compulsion toΒ dehumanizeΒ to our capacity to rehumanize." βDavid Eagleman, PhD, neuroscientist at Stanford, author, presenter of PBS's The Brain
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"Behave is a beautifully crafted work about the biology of morality. Sapolsky makes multiple passes at the target, using different time scales and systems. He shows you howΒ all the perspectives and systemsΒ connect, and heΒ makes you laugh and marvelΒ along the way. Sapolsky is not just a leading primatologist; heβs a great writer and a superb guide to human nature." βJonathan Haidt, New York University, author of The Righteous Mind
βThis is a miraculous book, by far the best treatment of violence, aggression, and competition ever.Β It ranges from how neurons and hormones interact, how emotions are an essential part of decision making, why adolescents are more likely to be violent than adults, why genes influence cultures and vice-versa, and the ins and outs of βwe versus them,β all the way to βlive and let liveβ truces in World War I and the My Lai massacre. Its depth and breadth of scholarship are amazing, building on Sapolskyβs own research and his vast knowledge of the neurobiology, genetic, and behavioral literature. For instance, Behave includes fair evaluations of complex debates (like over sociobiology) that I was involved in, and tackles controversial questions such as whether our hunter-gatherer ancestors warred on each other. He even takes on βfree willβ with a clarity usually absent from the writings of philosophers on the subject. All this is done brilliantly with a light and funny touch that shows why Sapolsky is recognized as one of the greatest teachers in science today.β βPaul R. Ehrlich, author of Human Natures
Robert M. Sapolsky is the author of several works of nonfiction, includingΒ A Primateβs Memoir,Β The Trouble with Testosterone, Why Zebras Donβt Get Ulcers, and Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will. He is a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford University and the recipient of a MacArthur Foundation βGenius Grant.β He and his wife live in San Francisco.
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