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Sex and War

How Biology Explains Warfare and Terrorism and Offers a Path to a Safer World

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Sex and War

Auteur(s): Malcom Potts, Thomas Hayden
Narrateur(s): Dennis Holland
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À propos de cet audio

Human beings have been battling one another since time immemorial. But why war and terrorism? Why are men almost always the killers, and why are war and sex so inextricably linked? Why do we kill members of our own species intentionally, when few other animals do so?

Sex and War traces the cultural and biological evolution of warfare from its prehuman origins through to our own times. In the spirit of Guns, Germs, and Steel, Potts and Hayden pull together insights from history, archaeology, psychology and biology to produce a clarifying new understanding of human history and current events.

Combining exhaustive research and rich personal experience, Sex and War shows that war, terrorism, slavery, and the subjugation of women have common roots deep in our biological history. Evolution is not destiny, however, and the authors, with the crucial contributions of Martha Campbell, show how relatively simple strategies can help the biology of peace win out over the biology of war. In doing so, they lay out a rational roadmap to make war less likely in the future, and less brutal when it does occur.

©2008 Malcom Potts and Thomas Hayden (P)2010 Audible, Inc.
Anthropologie Militaire Politique Questions de genre Sciences sociales Sociologie Violence dans la société Guerre Moyen-Orient Iran Afrique Impérialisme Réfugié Moyen Âge Amérique Latine Justice sociale Histoire ancienne
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