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The Play's the Thing
review by Michael Bérubé from American Scientist
"Let me explain a thing or two about humanists like me. There are legions of us who reach for our guns when we hear the word genome.
That’s because we’re all too familiar with the history of eugenics, and
we flinch whenever someone attempts an “evolutionary” explanation of
Why Society Is the Way It Is; we suspect them, with good reason, of
trying to justify some outrageous social injustice on the grounds that
it’s only natural. Likewise, there are legions of us who clap our hands
over our ears when we hear the term evolutionary psychology.
That’s because we’re all too familiar with the follies of sociobiology,
and we’ve suffered through lectures claiming that our species is
hardwired for middle-aged guys dumping their wives for young
secretaries and students (I sat through that lecture myself) or that
men run the world because women have wide hips for childbearing,
whereas men can rotate three-dimensional shapes in their heads (okay,
that one is a mash-up of two different lectures).
Brian Boyd is here to change all that. On the Origin of Stories
attempts an evolutionary explanation of the appearance of art—and, more
specifically, of the utility of fiction. From its title (with its
obvious echo of Darwin) to its readings of The Odyssey and Horton Hears a Who!,
Boyd’s book argues that the evolution of the brain (itself a
development of some significance to the world) has slowly and fitfully
managed to produce a species of primate whose members habitually try to
entertain and edify one another by making stuff up..."
Read the article.