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E-raamat: Meaning of Life, Human Nature, and Delusions: How Tales about Love, Sex, Races, Gods and Progress Affect Our Lives and Earth's Splendor

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319704012
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319704012

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Whatever are your beliefs, background, education, political views or interests, one thing is sure: this book will engage you, teach you something new, and more importantly make you to re-think deeply about critical aspects of your daily-life, including sex, love, food, physical activities, diseases, work and stress, and how you see and deal with other people, other animals, and the planet in general. Indeed, it focuses on topics that have fascinated people from all places and historical periods since times immemorial: Why are we here? What is the meaning of life? Are we progressing, and will we thrive? It does this by integrating in a unique fashion information from ancient Greek, Sumerian, Hindu, Jewish, Buddhist, Christian and Muslim texts to high-tech brain research, facts about near-death experiences, Covid-19, QAnon conspiracies, virtual reality and dating aps; from Adam and Eve to the rise of misogyny and racism to Black Lives Matter, Me-Too, Hollywood romantic movies and Disney fairy-tales. Contrary to notions about 'human progress' and 'Homo Deus' defended by authors such as Harari, Pinker and Dawkins, it shows that human history instead involves the repetition of similar imaginary tales created by a combination of traits found in other animals and the uniquely human obsession about 'cosmic purpose' stories related to our awareness of death's inevitability. Organized religions appeared later, chiefly during the rise of agriculture and 'civilizations'. Diogo navigates mesmerizing untold stories revealing a paradox: these events and the industrial 'revolution' increased inequality, oppression, slavery, subjugation of women, famines, plagues, 'work', stress, and suicides. Data from psychology, biology, neurobiology, and cross-cultural studies of hunter-gatherers and so-called 'developed' societies reveal an even more profound paradox: within all forms of life, the 'sapient being' is the one immersed in Neverland's world of unreality - truly a Homo irrationalis, fictus and socialis believing in fictional tales about cosmic 'duties', 'romantic meant to be', demons, inferior 'races' and 'genders', conspiracies, and 'justified' slavery, warfare, genocides, and animal abuses. Importantly, such tales play, on the other hand, crucial functions such as help copying with death and a plethora of societal troubles, decreasing stress, or preventing drug and alcohol abuse. An optimist and passionate wondered and wanderer, Diogo provides enthralling details about the history of religion, discrimination, romantic love, warfare, diseases and Earth's biodiversity illustrating how 'virtue is in the middle' and that we - with our intriguing combination of beliefs, bodily needs and desires, artistic abilities, and mismatches between our senses' illusions and the cosmos' reality - are not 'better' or 'worse' than the other millions of captivating living species. This powerful and urgently needed message has critical repercussions for how we understand, care about, and mindfully enjoy living in this splendid planet, in the reality of here and now.

Pre-publication comments: 

"I applaud the enormous work that Diogo has invested in this follow-up to his widely acclaimed Evolution driven by organismal behavior book, and the challenge of getting people to think beyond and outside of our usual set of definitions and expectations. The case-studies provided in the book are fascinating and insightful" (Drew Noden, Award-winning Emeritus Professor, Cornell University)

"Rui Diogo is becoming the Slavoj Zizek of evolutionary biology" (Marcelo Sanchez-Villagra, Director of the Paleontological Institute and Museum of the University of Zurich) 

1 Introduction
1(26)
1.1 Standing on the Shoulders of Others
1(4)
1.2 Notes on Interdisciplinarity
5(22)
2 Death and Cosmic Purpose of Life
27(70)
2.1 Quests to Find a Cosmic Purpose of Life
27(4)
2.2 Beliefs, Religion, and Evolution
31(11)
2.3 Fear of Death, Purpose, and Human Evolution
42(33)
2.4 Teleology, Morality, and Organized Religions
75(16)
2.5 Beliefs, Atheism, and Spirituality
91(6)
3 Our Place in Nature, Progress, and Racism
97(90)
3.1 Quests to Understand Our Place in Nature
97(18)
3.2 Cultural and Innate Notions of Race
115(6)
3.3 Aristotle, Galen, Monkeys, and Chain of Being
121(15)
3.4 Apes and Rise of Innate Notions of "Race"
136(18)
3.5 Apish Humans, Malthus, and Darwin
154(12)
3.6 Medical Experimentation, Eugenics, and Genocide
166(21)
4 Myths and Reality About "Savages" and "Civilization"
187(58)
4.1 "Savages," "Civilization," and Inequality
187(24)
4.2 Agriculture, Labor, Slavery, and "Progress"
211(20)
4.3 Hobbes, Rousseau's "Noble Savage," and Violence
231(14)
5 Sex, Love, Marriage, and Misogyny
245(118)
5.1 Homosexuality, Sex, and Romantic Love
245(12)
5.2 Agriculture, "Original Sin," and Monogamy
257(6)
5.3 Women, Men, Sexual Desire, and Orgasms
263(15)
5.4 Sex at Dawn, Sex at Dusk, and Scientific Biases
278(18)
5.5 History of Marriage, Love, and Sex
296(30)
5.6 Misogyny, Religion, and Hypatia of Alexandria
326(21)
5.7 Myths and Facts About Gender Roles and Differences
347(16)
6 Darwin, Capitalism, Colonialism, and Beliefs
363(62)
6.1 Darwin's Idolization, Darwinism, and Just-so-Stories
363(8)
6.2 Purpose, Struggle-for-Life, and Selfish Genes
371(13)
6.3 "Higher" or "Favored" Groups, Racism, and Capitalism
384(17)
6.4 "Savages," Colonialism, Slavery, and Neo-colonialism
401(24)
7 Brains, Conspiracies, Witches, and Animal Abuse
425(134)
7.1 Brains, Behavior, Genes, and Religions
425(6)
7.2 Randomness, Lack of Control, and Conspiracy Theories
431(8)
7.3 Witches, Sexuality, Magic, and QAnon Conspiracies
439(25)
7.4 Teleological Tales, Violence, and Torture
464(6)
7.5 Homo Irrationalis, War, Terrorism, and Mass Killings
470(34)
7.6 "Savages," Animal Abuse, and Humanism
504(38)
7.7 `Monsters', Disabilities, and Mass Murder
542(17)
8 "Progress," Morality, and "Good" and "Evil"
559(86)
8.1 Morality, "Progress," Revolutions, and Health
559(14)
8.2 "Noble Savages," Technological Development, and Loneliness
573(14)
8.3 Affluence, Abundance, Growth, and Inequity
587(26)
8.4 Rousseau, Hobbes, Biases, and "Civilization"
613(12)
8.5 Child Mortality, Unlimited Wants, and our Planet
625(20)
9 Towards a Fulfilling Life in This Splendid, Non-Purposeful, Planet
645(164)
9.1 Nature, Nurture, Inculturation, and Self-Domestication
645(41)
9.2 Homo Irrationalis, Socialis, and Fictus in Neverland
686(21)
9.3 No Need for Better Angels, Economic Fairytales, Nor New Delusions
707(20)
9.4 Medicine, Wellbeing, Science, and Fake News
727(16)
9.5 Epicurus, Lucretius, Sagan, Gould: A Splendid Non-Purposeful Cosmos
743(66)
References and Suggested Further Reading 809(16)
Figure Credits 825(10)
Index 835
Rui Diogo is Associate Professor at Howard University and Resource Faculty at the Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology of GWU. He won several prestigious awards and is renown worldwide due to his multidisciplinary approach to address broader questions and societal issues using state-of-the-art empirical data, what some nowadays call "experimental philosophy" or "scientific philosophy". He is the author of more than 100 papers in top journals and about 20 books, including one adopted at medical schools worldwide, "Learning and understanding human anatomy and pathology", and one often listed among the ten best evolutionary books in 2017, "Evolution driven by organismal behavior".