felgorni reviewed Behave by Robert M. Sapolsky
None
4 stars
I had watched almost all of sapolsky lectures on youtube and fell in love with him, so I grabbed this book to have a more structured understanding of what's thought in them.
As the lectures, this book is divided in two sections. The first one is the one about biology, very close to the lectures, but with a much stronger structure. The "scaling" chapter division is one of the best things of this book and has remarkably hapled me follow every topic.
The second one drifts from the lectures: instead of looking at the individual's behaviours and pathologies, it addresses more abstract topics, like ethics, war, etc.
I found this second half a bit vague with respect to the rest, even more anectodical, and with even less connections to the first half.
I adored the first part, but the second fell kind of flat with respect to my expectations.
Overall …
I had watched almost all of sapolsky lectures on youtube and fell in love with him, so I grabbed this book to have a more structured understanding of what's thought in them.
As the lectures, this book is divided in two sections. The first one is the one about biology, very close to the lectures, but with a much stronger structure. The "scaling" chapter division is one of the best things of this book and has remarkably hapled me follow every topic.
The second one drifts from the lectures: instead of looking at the individual's behaviours and pathologies, it addresses more abstract topics, like ethics, war, etc.
I found this second half a bit vague with respect to the rest, even more anectodical, and with even less connections to the first half.
I adored the first part, but the second fell kind of flat with respect to my expectations.
Overall great book and experience
PS I read many comments addressing the "cherrypicking" of scientific literature done in this book, but from what I could tell, Sapolsky seems concerned a lot of times with providing all the literature and with putting his hands forward.
Maybe the book is not very up to date, but for the general audience to which it is intended, I think some little lies are ok if the bigger aim is the understading of a deeper concept.