|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
A dazzling follow-up to Life As Told by a Sapiens to a Neanderthal.
âWe would love to discover that each species has a biological
clock in its cells, because, if that clock existed and if we were
able to find it, perhaps we could stop it and thus become
eternal,â Arsuaga tells MillĂĄs in this book, in which science is
intertwined with literature. The paleontologist reveals essential
aspects of our existence to the writer, who discovers that old age
is a country in which he still feels like a foreigner. After the
extraordinary international reception of Life as Told by a Sapiens
to a Neanderthal, the most brilliant double act in Spanish
literature once again dazzle the reader by addressing topics such
as death and eternity, longevity, disease, ageing, natural
selection, programmed death, and survival. Here you will find
humour, biology, nature, life, a lot of life ⊠and two
fascinating characters, the Sapiens and the Neanderthal, who
surprise us on every page with their sharp reflections on how
evolution has treated us as a species. And also as individuals.
A New Scientist Book of the Year Prehistory is all around us. We
just need to know where to look. Juan Jose Millas has always felt
like he doesn't quite fit into human society. Sometimes he wonders
if he is even a Homo sapiens at all. Perhaps he is a Neanderthal
who somehow survived? So he turns to Juan Luis Arsuaga, one of the
world's leading palaeontologists and a super-smart sapiens, to
explain why we are the way we are and where we come from. Over the
course of many months the two visit different places, many of them
common scenes of our daily lives, and others unique archaeological
sites. Arsuaga tries to teach the Neanderthal how to think like a
sapiens and, above all, that prehistory is not a thing of the past:
that traces of humanity through the millennia can be found
anywhere, from a cave or a landscape to a children's playground or
a toy shop. Millas and Arsuaga invite you on a journey of wonder
that unites scientific discovery with the greatest human invention
of all: the art of storytelling.
|
You may like...
Workplace law
John Grogan
Paperback
R900
R820
Discovery Miles 8 200
|