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Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters  By  cover art

Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters

By: Alan S. Miller, Satoshi Kanazawa
Narrated by: Stephen Hoye
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Editorial reviews

If you've ever wondered why human beings act the way they act, or prefer the things (and people) they prefer, take note - Alan S. Miller and Satoshi Kanazawa may have the answers...or at least some of them. In Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters, these co-authors sink their teeth into age-old controversies about human nature, attempting to deploy the strictures of evolutionary biology in order to explain quite broadly why people are the way we are.

Stephen Hoye's strong pacing translates the book's accessible tone into an equally listenable experience, and his clear voice endows this intriguing work with an authoritative vibe.

Publisher's summary

A lively and provocative look at how evolution shapes our behavior and our lives.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, our brains and bodies are hardwired to carry out an evolutionary mission that determines much of what we do, from life plans to everyday decisions.

With an accessible tone and a healthy disregard for political correctness, this lively and eminently readable book popularizes the latest research in a cutting-edge field of study: one that turns much of what we thought we knew about human nature upside-down.

Every time we fall in love, fight with our spouse, enjoy watching a favorite TV show, or feel scared walking alone at night, we are in part behaving as a human animal with its own unique nature: a nature that essentially stopped evolving 10,000 years ago. Alan S. Miller and Satoshi Kanazawa reexamine some of the most popular and controversial topics of modern life and shed a whole new light on why we do the things we do.

Beware: You may never look at human nature the same way again.

©2007 Alan S. Miller and Satoshi Kanazawa (P)2007 Tantor Media Inc.

Critic reviews

"A lively excursion into the new, and still disputed, field of Evolutionary Psychology." ( Kirkus Reviews)
"This accessible book opens the youthful field of evolutionary psychology wide for examination, with results often as disturbing as they are fascinating." ( Publishers Weekly)

What listeners say about Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters

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Popularizing Junk Science...Poorly

Would you try another book from Alan S. Miller and Satoshi Kanazawa and/or Stephen Hoye?

Maybe if the topic was more rooted in something more testable.

Would you ever listen to anything by Alan S. Miller and Satoshi Kanazawa again?

While the book was easy to to follow, I think I'd prefer to check the sources of their books as I go. So I don't think I'll be listening to them again.

Which character – as performed by Stephen Hoye – was your favorite?

There were no characters in this book.

If you could play editor, what scene or scenes would you have cut from Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters?

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Populist's point of view

The authors are giving unexpected point of view, but most of their theories are total crap.

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False Premise

The entire book is based on an entirely false premise. The authors take many subjective views on nature vs nurture and they're wrong. Frighteningly wrong considering their "expert" status.

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Social Science is a joke even when you pretend to add Biology

It's time we stop writing books that aren't scientific as if they are. Erroneous and irrelevant interpretation of correlations is y science, this book is a joke.

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