The Red Queen 149
The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature | |
author | Matt Ridley |
pages | 405 |
publisher | Penguin Books |
rating | Excellent |
reviewer | Chris 'Xenon' Hanson |
ISBN | 0140245480 |
summary | Why sex is the reason humans are at the top of the food chain. |
After laying our souls (and chromosomes!) bare in Genome, Ridley swiftly moves on to a topic that is variously fascinating and taboo: Sex. Every Slashdot user it seems wants more information about it. Ridley immediately tackles the Paradox of Sex: In an asexual organism, every individual of the species can create offspring. In sexual creatures (like people!), only the female can produce young. What's so great about sex then, that overcomes this obvious numerical handicap? In eleven brisk chapters, Ridley unravels the riddles with examples of how and why other species Do It (or Don't It), and what it all means.
Topics explored (though not claimed to be definitively explained) include mitochondrial DNA, dowries, the genetic foundations of harems, how males of a species could develop flagrant 'handicaps' like bright coloration or songs, monogamy, polygamy, adultery and a small species of New Zealand snail that suffers from a parasite named (I'm not making this up) Microphallus. One of the most compelling concepts is that a species' strongest competitor (and driving force behind their evolution) is their own kind, not their foes. In the end it is this argument, called The Red Queen (after a Lewis Carrol character that runs quickly but never gets ahead) that explains so much of our evolutionary hodgepodge of DNA and instinctive behaviour.
Around the world The Red Queen hustles, dissecting the environmental clues given by the mating rituals and biology of various species, asexual, sexual, heterosexual, hermaphroditic and otherwise, comparing them to Homo Sapiens, "the sexiest primate alive" (except for bonobos). As for humans, Ridley divulges how walking upright and our large brains are connected to our comparatively slow maturation, long lifespan and lack of hair. Always in the background is the unquestionable tenet: No one is descended from a celibate organism.
Ridley daringly takes on feminism and gender equality by pointing out that males and females DO differ genetically (duh!) and that in other species the effect of this difference is quite marked. Rather than degenerating into a misogynistic orgy of gender-bashing, he exposes the reasons why (among other differences) men might actually be better at reading maps and women might be more social. Both genders have to get along in order to continue the species, so understanding our differences may be a boon to all. While in the mood for controversy, Ridley delves into the reasons for the genetic-confounding phenomena of homosexuality in a species.
You don't need to have read Genome to read Red Queen, but if you have, you might find all of the puzzles fitting together into an even bigger picture, to be further sketched out in The Origins of Virtue and Nature Via Nurture. This book is not illustrated and probably won't help you get a date next weekend, but it might explain why you're instinctively attracted to those three young blondes at the bar. And why they're all more interested in the cinderblock quarterback of the football team. And despite what my inbox tells me, it has nothing to do with the size of a certain part of your anatomy, but rather the size of ... well, go read the book.
Table of Contents
- Human Nature
- The Enigma
- The Power of Parasites
- Genetic Mutiny and Gender
- The Peacock's Tale
- Polygamy and the Nature of Men
- Monogamy and the Nature of Women
- Sexing the Mind
- The Uses of Beauty
- The Intellectual Chess Game
- The Self-Domesticated Ape
You can purchase The Red Queen from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
If you don't know (Score:5, Funny)
If you don't know, you're probably too young for me to explain it to you!
Re:If you don't know (Score:2, Funny)
Re:If you don't know (Score:1, Redundant)
ADD Version (Score:1, Interesting)
If Creation is true marriage (1 Man/1 Woman) is from God and therefore is right and good.
QED Marriage (1 Man/1 Woman) is right and good wherever we came from.
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If Evolution is true, marriage (1 Man/1 Woman) is a result of natural selection and therefore is right and good.
Wouldn't homosexuality also be the result of natural selection and therefore right and good? If it was detrimental it would have been selected away and wouldn't exist, right? This is as opposed to continuing to exist across centuries and civilizations. Bigotry on the other hand, is rapidly g
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The conclusion you draw is made unworkable by the First Amendment, which prohibits government from telling religions what to do (in non-secular matters).
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This just isn't true. The Catholic Church doesn't permit the remarriage of divorcees with living spouses. The US government does. Yet the Catholic Church cannot be forced to perform a wedding involving a divorced person.
Religious and civil mariages are entirely separate institutions in the US, a fact masked by the fact that the vast majority of married people have both done. My mother and my stepfather were married in judge'
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If the government didn't regulate marriages then who would? In the US we have a seperation of church and state and clearly we have more than one religion. Many religious organizations aren't so well organized as to be able to prevent polygamy.
Why would you want to prevent polygamy?
The main reason that I can see to avoid polygamy is for the pure and simple reason of simplicity. If you have children and you are married
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Then you get to the question of multiple multiple marriages. Imagine if you had 3 spouses and each of your spouses had 3 spouses. Then things get really unclear as to responsability for the children, property, vehicle ownershi
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Only recently was the "Marriage Tax Penalty" eliminated (albeit temporarily) - or brought in line to allow the standard deduction to be exactly double that of those single folks.
Re:ADD Version (Score:3, Interesting)
I have wondered, though... how exactly are pro-gay genes promoted? I assume that they are recessive genes (no judgement here... just that gay folks are in the vast minority), and as such aren't likely to last long, since true homosexuality would prevent breeding, right?
Please no flames on this, I am not passing judgement (at least not negatively. I have zero problem with h
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A homosexual in a family group increases the adult/child ratio therefore improving care and survivability of the child. The family group passes on the recessive genes of the homosexual who does not reproduce.
Interestingly a similar study
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A homosexual in a family group increases the adult/child ratio therefore improving care and survivability of the child. The family group passes on the recessive genes of the homosexual who does not reproduce.
What is this based on? Have there been such studies, or is this a case of 'people who don't have kids help others take care of theirs' ?
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Purely a proposal of my diseased mind as far as I know. The similar idea about suicide I did read and was proposed by a "respected source" though I can't recall it. My wife is a mental health professional so this kind of stuff is always being discussed or lying around in journals.
Re:ADD Version (Score:2, Informative)
This is an example of "group selectionism", which doesn't find much favor among professional biologists nowadays. Their reasoning is that it is easy for such groups to be invaded by mutants who "cheat".
For example, in a population where everyone has a tendency towards suicide in lean times, any mutant that lacks suicidal tendencies wil
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One thing to note is that homosexuals seem to be disproportionately represented in the creative arts. That might be because such areas of society are more tolerant of unconventional behaviour. Or it might be that there is some correlation bet
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Or alternatively:
Now I realize that these are quite unpopular and controversi
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I agree with you completely when speaking of foul-language, but the ideas expressed clearly met the exact definition of bigot [reference.com]. Aft
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Calling something an "illness" is just semantics. Simply applying a pejorative term does not explain why homosexual behavior is so common, not merely in humans but in many other species. And by the way, vulnerability to real diseases, such as those caused by viruses and bacteria is influenced by genetic predisposition.
The fact that homosexuals would have self-selected themselves out of the gene pool long ago shows
Re:ADD Version (Score:2)
I agree that a gene which predisposes someone toward homosexuality may propagate through the methods you mentioned; however, this is possible only because of the "side effects" of a given gene combination induce homosexuality.
Or, more simply, homosexual traits can be passed on when the primary role of a gene is something other than homosexuality. However, it follows from logic that one who is strictly homosexual (as opposed to bisexual) would never pass on their genes to the next generation. Hence, a
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What separates mankind from the rest of the animal kingdom is that man has both free will and moral knowledge. Because of such, God expects better behavior from us than from animals - while a dog may eat its own feces out of carnal curiousity, such behavior would be undignified, and outrigh
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Actually, the "design" of h
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It is the struggle to overcome the desires of the flesh which makes mankind more dignified than animals. An animal has no freedom, no free will - it can do only what it's carnal desires dictate. And this is the problem with homosexuality in humans - in order to engage in homosexuality, a person presents himself as a slave to
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Yes, that's my point - there is more dignity in one who overcomes their desires (regardless of their sexuality) than there is one who lives in subjugation to them. For some reason, however, the homosexual community seems oblivious to this.
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Why should homosexuals be any different from heterosexuals in this respect? After all, for a person with heterosexual desires, overcoming one's desires would mean having exclusively homosexual sex, or not having sex at all. But most people with heterosexual desires "live
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Wouldn't homosexuality also be the result of natural selection and therefore right and good? If it was detrimental it would have been selected away and wouldn't exist, right?
Murder and deceit still exist as well. They are evil behaviors and yet have not been selected away.
If creation is true we've got a lot more to worry about than the proper definition of marriage.
Yes- we'd have to worry about how we are going to continue making ourselves to be gods when the truth has been revealed.
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At this point I'm thinking the original post was a damn good troll.
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Perhaps you've forgotten your history where at least two of the three primary monotheistic religions have traditions of polygamy. Christains probably have it in their origins too, and the US is just repressed enough that I haven't encountered discussion of ancient christain polygamy in the popular press (yet) - mormons don't count because they are a new sect.
Therefore, it is pretty clear that polygamy is from God and not monogamy.
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Additionally it's difficul
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"And Adam said, this is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called woman, because she was taken out of man. Therefore shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh." - Genesis 2:23 24
"The Pharisees also came unto him, tempting him, saying unto him, Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause? And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made t
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First, in genesis, the creation of Adam and Eve. Not Adam, Eve, Sue, etc...
Also in genesis we also have where Abram (to be Abraham) takes Sari's (to be Sarah) maidservent and has a child with her. While it was acceptable of the time to do that, the rift caused through bitterness of Sari and the maidservent was an example of why it was a bad thing.
Also, David is punished for taking Bersheba (sp?) though she was already married, then killing the man (or having him killed by putting
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If as I said there are no direct condemnations of polygamy then one can argue that by omission polygamy is allowed.
For instance one could argue that the scriptures you bring up do nothing to OMIT polygamy. The scriptures more specifically relate to greed - for example David covetting anot
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You are assuming that an exclusive, monogamous pair-bond is the method that has been 'selected', it is not. Human pair bonds are accompanied by *very* common and predictable patterns of adultery. Male and female patterns are quite different reflecting their different roles and stakes in reproduction. There is also evidence to suggest that, historically, males have set up harems whenever circumsta
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This is foolish in two ways:
1) Natural selection has no morality. That which survives is not morally better than that which dies out.
2) Studies reveal that a monogomous relationship between 1 female/1 male is actually rare in nature. Most species are promiscuous or cheat on their spouses, just like us. Homesexuality is also rather common.
Red Queen is a much earlier book than Genome (Score:5, Informative)
By the way, I echo the recommendation -- reading this book profoundly changed how I think about evolution and genetics. The only comparably assumption-shattering biology book I can think of is Stephen Jay Gould's Wonderful Life.
Re:Red Queen is a much earlier book than Genome (Score:5, Insightful)
You're right, The Red Queen predates Genome. The Viking edition is from 1993, by the way - 10 years of scientific research have passed since then, and I would very much appreciate an updated edition taking into account the new insights gathered since then.
See this [slashdot.org] older post of mine for some remarks on Ridley's books.
By the way, I echo the recommendation -- reading this book profoundly changed how I think about evolution and genetics. The only comparably assumption-shattering biology book I can think of is Stephen Jay Gould's Wonderful Life.
Reading Dawkins' "The Selfish Gene" and Ridley's "The Red Queen" was a disturbing and exciting experience for me, because it shattered many beliefs I held about mankind and society. I have since read many more books on the subject, and here are a few I can recommend if you're interested in contemporary scientific views on evolution and related fields of study:
Matt Ridley: The Origins of Virtue (*)
Steven Pinker: How the Mind Works, The Language Instinct
Richard Dawkins: The Selfish Gene, The Blind Watchmaker, Climbing Mount Improbable
Geoffrey Miller: The Mating Mind
(*) with a caveat: he lets his political views influence his writing a little too much in this one
Re:Red Queen is a much earlier book than Genome (Score:2, Informative)
Otherwise, I would also recommend:
Desmond Morris: The Naked Ape
Daniel Dennett: Darwin's Dangeroous Idea
(Dennett is a philosopher, and thus looks at the logic more than the science, but it is still an excellent work. He has another excellent book, that has much less to do with evolution and genetics: Consciousness Explained.)
Re:Red Queen is a much earlier book than Genome (Score:2, Interesting)
All in all, it's a balanced, very interes
Re:Red Queen is a much earlier book than Genome (Score:2, Interesting)
SJG is not quite so fondly thought of among evolutionary biologists (see reviews of his book The Structure of Evolutionary Theory by people like John Maynard Smith).
My recommendations for related reading posted under a threat by that name.
Re:Red Queen is a much earlier book than Genome (Score:1)
For another book which may challenge your assumptions about our evolutionary process, physiological features and sex, I would strongly recommend The Descent of Woman by Elaine Morgan. For me this has probably had the greatest impact of any book that I have ever read.
The author makes you reconsider the prevailing idea that the apes came down from the trees and turned into Tarzan. Read this and you may conclude that your bare skin evolved as the result of much different environmental factors. The author
Sex (Score:2, Interesting)
Desmond Morris has a series on TLC called The Human Animal in which he describes in termendous detail how and why humans have sex. There's even a nipple in the show! Beyond the perversion of watching it simply because it talks about sex, its really interesting.
Re:Sex (Score:2)
Yes. Actually, it does.
Re:Sex (Score:3, Funny)
So? I've got two of the damn things right here on my own chest. Pretty useless if you ask me.
And nipples get shown during the weightlifting, swimming, or bodybuilding sporting events televised every weekend, to say nothing of all the "beach" sitcoms and dramas on the major networks every night. Nipples on TV? Big freakin' deal.
Oh
I need another coffee... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I need another coffee... (Score:2, Funny)
A few percent (Score:5, Funny)
It has been noted that the difference between the XX and XY chromosomes in the human males and females amounts to about 3% of genetic material.
Note also that in general the human species only differs about 3% from chimpanzies.
From this some have inferred that a human male is more similar to a male chimpanzee than to a human female.
Re:A few percent (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A few percent (Score:3, Funny)
Re:A few percent (Score:3, Funny)
You've obviously never been to Boston.
Re:A few percent (Score:2)
Re:A few percent (Score:1, Funny)
Instead of paying someone in a white coat to try to figure this out by staring through a microscope and injecting blue fluid into countless vials, I imagine it would be fairly inexpensive to resolve that question empirically.
But, darn it, whenever I'm around the chimp, I get so nervous and don't know what to say.
recommended related reading (Score:4, Interesting)
It has enough sex talk in it to satisfy your prurient interests. Not the gross squshy kind, but the clean, technical sex that will hit /.ers right in the honeypot.
Ooh baby... you extended my phenotype!
Re:recommended related reading (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:recommended related reading (Score:2, Informative)
FWIW, here's my suggested reading list for those interested in the topics covered by The Red Queen.
Dawkins: Extended Phenotype
Cronin: The Ant and the Peacock
Segerstrale: Defenders of The Truth
Another highly recommended book on behavioural biology, but in a slightly different vein
Sapolsky: The trouble with Testosterone
A fascinating book that enthralls as much as a nov (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:A fascinating book that enthralls as much as a (Score:3, Insightful)
Mod the parent down. Moderators, please stop smoking the crack.
Matt Ridley interview (Score:4, Informative)
Resident evil reference (Score:1)
Re:Resident evil reference (Score:4, Informative)
The title of Ridley's book is a reference to Lewis Carrol's "Through the Looking Glass" [literature.org]:
The last paragraph nicely sums up the view that in evolution, standing still means falling into extinction and just keeping one's place is a difficult proposition.
Heh (Score:1)
Whoa, slow down there cowboy!
You're all going to die down here (Score:1)
Just a side note, the red queen was added in the movie and is not featured in the PS or GC consoles.
bonobos deserve strong mention (Score:5, Insightful)
They are the closest animals to humans (genetically speaking) walk upright fairly often, similar size, etc.
Once you've studied bonobos for awhile, you start to get the feeling that about 99% of our sexual taboos are strictly cultural, developed over time as a function of the need for societal control, either to limit disease propagation or to assert power hierarchies, probably to keep a large pool of females available for the wealthy patriarchs.
more on bonobos (Score:2)
Unfortunately, their native habitat is being destroyed and they are endangered. The parent post is totally correct in saying they are very close to
Re:bonobos deserve strong mention (Score:1)
Mistook the title... (Score:1)
great book (Score:2, Informative)
basically, women choose a husband based on his abilities as a provider. but they frequently choose a sex partner based on his physical attributes. the idea is that their offspring will have great physical attributes, but will be raised (unwittingly) by the nice
"The Red Queen" (Score:1)
Reductionist (Score:1, Insightful)
walking upright (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll bite -- what's his theory?
AFAIK, the evolutionary origin of bipedalism is a completely unsolved problem. There have been various theories, but none of them really hold water. A popular idea for a long time was that it allowed us to have our hands free for tool use, but now we know that bipedalism evolved a million years before big brains and tool use. (Australopithecus was basically a human from the neck down, a chimp from the neck up.) It can't be explained by the ability to get your eyes high off the ground and see far away, because chimps and gorillas can stand up too when they want to look around. It's probably not efficient locomotion, because the most efficient walkers and runners are quadrupeds like dogs and horses. (There were some experiments that purported to show humans walked more efficiently than chimps, but they were flawed.)
There was also a theory by Lovejoy that bipedalism was the result of sexual selection, and maybe that's what the story is referring to. The Lovejoy theory was that females were choosing who to mate with, and males, in order to get laid, were using their hands to bring tasty food as gifts to the females. The problem with this theory is that austrolapithecines had strong sexual dimorphism -- males were about 50% bigger than females. This kind of dimorphism is typical of species where the male controls a harem, defending it against other males.
Re:walking upright (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know how the theories have cha
Origins of Virtue review (Score:3, Informative)
Apologies in advance for the yucky HTML that LaTeX2HTML produced in those days. If I can find the original source, I'll see if I can generate a usable PDF.
(And let me fix a few of the broken links in that before I hit the submit button).
Speciesist! (Score:2)
(a) Millions of seahorses around the world are reading this and saying "what are we, chopped liver"?
(b) Saying "only the female can produce young" is a bit moronic anyway when you were just talking about asexual reproduction, where one thing really can produce young. The whole point of sexual reproduction is that neither can produce young alone.
It is true that in most species the female body has a much more significant role as a host
Re:Sex is holding us back! (Score:2)
There's a trilogy ("Titan","Wizard","Demon") by (um), John Varley that explores the concept of a group of women deciding to procreate through artifical insemention.
If you're looking for a "today" example, there is a group of lizards that reproduce through parthenogesis that live in Arizona.
insemination? (Score:1)
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Re:Sex is holding us back! (Score:2)
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Re:Sex is holding us back! (Score:2)
it's not the sex (Score:1)
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Re:kinda like the Matrix (Score:1)
However the last is unlikely IMHO.
-uso.
Barely Junk Science (Score:1)
What about grasshoppers/locusts? They HAVE to keep moving because they CONSUME everything, including each other. Another example: Army Ants. The keep moving, consuming everything, building bridges with the sacrificial bodies of the workers.
I haven't seen any so-called environmental protection groups formed by the Locusts or Army Ants, or any virus for that matter.
Further, humans do not use all the r
Re:Barely Junk Science (Score:2, Insightful)
Humans have had a population explosion that just
Re:$3.20 Cheaper from Amazon. (Score:1)
Re:$3.20 Cheaper from Amazon. (Score:1)