cover image Homo Mysterious: Evolutionary Puzzles of Human Nature

Homo Mysterious: Evolutionary Puzzles of Human Nature

David P. Barash. Oxford Univ, $27.95 (336p) ISBN 978-0-19-975194-5

Evolutionary questions about the human condition abound, and Barash, a University of Washington professor of psychology and biology, (Madame Bovary’s Ovaries), addresses some of the most provocative in this thoughtful, witty book. Barash focuses on interesting conundrums: why do women have orgasms; why does menopause exist; why do men have shorter average life spans than women; what’s the evolutionary reason for homosexuality, the arts, and religion. Yet the book’s success lies not in the answers to these questions—as Barash explains, we don’t (yet) have answers. What he does so well is to demonstrate, first, how evolutionary theory helps shape our thinking on these questions, while guiding us to differentiate between the possible and the implausible. Second, by considering and discarding numerous possible answers to each question (is female orgasm merely the by-product of another evolutionary adaptation? Or did it evolve to induce women to have numerous sexual partners to guarantee reproduction?), he shows how tentative scientific explanations are and the critical role hypothesis testing plays in our understanding of the world. As he has done before, Barash makes the case for the power of science while demonstrating the intellectual joy that can accompany the journey of discovery. (July)