Showing posts with label Richard Dawkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Dawkins. Show all posts

Thursday, July 3, 2025

Richard Dawkins - The Genetic Book Of The Dead (Head Of Zeus, 2024) ****½


Richard Dawkins writing purely about our biology and the impact of evolution, without any attacks on religion. This is new territory for me, and this book is a treat. Dawkins "Book of the Dead" has nothing to do with the Tibetan or Egyptian "books of the dead". This one is about how we can trace back some of the characteristics of animals to their genetic origins, including the environments in which they lived and evolved. 

How camouflage evolved in some animals, how some animals evolved to land and returned to the see, how eye-sight changed and developed, ... He gives hundreds of bizarre and quite exceptional behaviour in animals that become easy to understand once Dawkins explains what has or might have happened in the genetic archives of the species. He also explained how different species developed similar characteristics independently from each other. He does this with layman's language, with sufficient science to make it interesting, but still focused on delivering a text that many without a scientific education can read without any problem. And to his credit, he also comes with quite a number of "scientific intuitions" or theories on what needs further exploration. 

The book is nicely illustrated by Jana Lenzová and contains a wealth of pictures. 

Apart from the interesting subject itself, Dawkins's enthusiasm and wonder about our living world makes it an even easier to recommend book. 



Saturday, December 26, 2020

Richard Dawkins - Outgrowing God (Penguin, 2020) ***


 If anything, biologist Richard Dawkins has managed to bring the debate about religion to a different level, and often even instigating a debate that most intellectuals shy away from with the simple pretext that they respect other people's opinion and that religion is not really their area of interest: science is, knowledge is. 

It is to Dawkins' credit that he leads the debate to the observation that religion stands in the way of true knowledge, and that its stories, narratives, beliefs and moral teachings are more a handy self-delusion than a useful instrument to live your life by. 

In "Outgrowing God", he continues his in the same vein as in all his other books. His approach now is to lead believers step by step and with the tools of reason and science to an aspired concession that indeed, any religious belief is actually silly and more grounded in cultural and social frameworks than in actual reality. 

Of course, the risk of such an effort is that the only people reading the book are already convinced before reading the book, and not many believers will even touch his texts, let alone be persuaded by them. 

Despite this fact of potential ineffectiveness, it remains a worthwhile read, if only for the non-believer to wonder again at the fascinating world we live in, and to have some more arguments and insights when discussing this directly with believers - but of course in a friendly and respectful manner. 


Saturday, December 30, 2006

Top 10 - 2006

Hier is mijn lijstje van beste boeken van 2006

  • Haruki Murakami - South Of The Border, West Of The Sun
  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez - Living To Tell The Tale
  • Brett Easton Ellis - Lunar Park
  • Michel Houllebecq - The Possibility Of An Island
  • Dino Buzzati - De Woestijn van de Tartaren
  • Philippe Claudel - Les Âmes Grises
  • Richard Dawkins - The God Delusion (geen fictie)
  • Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner
  • Nawal Al Saadawi - The Fall Of The Imam
Het zijn er wel net geen tien en een volgorde bleek ook niet zo simpel, vandaar in willekeurige rangorde.