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'This wise and beautiful book ... bears upon every page the imprint of a profound, humane and questing mind.' - Observer
Konrad Lorenz was the author of some of the most popular books ever
published about animals, including the best-selling Man Meets Dog
and King Solomon's Ring. On Aggression is one of his finest works,
as well as the most controversial. Through an insightful and
characteristically entertaining survey of animal behaviour, the
Nobel Prize winner tracks the evolution of aggression throughout
the animal world. He also raises some startling questions when he
applies his observations of animal psychology to humankind. His
conclusions caused an unprecedented controversy, culminating in a
statement adopted by UNESCO in 1989 which appeared to condemn his
work. Whether or not Lorenz actually claimed aggression is
hard-wired into the human psyche, and that war is an inevitable
result, is something readers can decide upon for themselves.
However you react, there can be no doubting that in today's violent
world this powerful work remains of paramount importance.
'This wise and beautiful book ... bears upon every page the imprint of a profound, humane and questing mind.' - Observer
'For great interest, amusement and relaxation - in short, for unalloyed pleasurel - let nothing stop you from getting hold of a copy.' - Liverpool Post
'It is one of the best and most penetrating non-technical books about animals and animal nature that has ever been written ... every sensitive reader will agree that the book is a work of humanity, wisdom and balance as well as of delightful humour.' - W H Thorpe
UNESCO was created "to contribute to peace and security by
promoting collaboration among the nations through education,
science, and culture." No one spoke with greater authority about
the plan for UNESCO than Julian Huxley. As Executive Secretary of
its Preparatory Commission and first Director General, he was a
major influence the organization's original vision. This facsimile
edition provides both the English and French editions of Huxley's
visionary policy document, first published in 1946 during
preparatory negotiations.
The definitive edition of one of the most important scientific
books of the twentieth century, setting out the conceptual
structure underlying evolutionary biology. This classic work by
Julian Huxley, first published in 1942, captured and synthesized
all that was then known about evolutionary biology and gave a name
to the Modern Synthesis, the conceptual structure underlying the
field for most of the twentieth century. Many considered Huxley's
book a popularization of the ideas then emerging in evolutionary
biology, but in fact Evolution: The Modern Synthesis is a work of
serious scholarship that is also accessible to the general educated
public. It is a book in the intellectual tradition of Charles
Darwin and Thomas Henry Huxley-Julian Huxley's grandfather, known
for his energetic championing of Darwin's ideas. A contemporary
reviewer called Evolution: The Modern Synthesis "the outstanding
evolutionary treatise of the decade, perhaps the century." This
definitive edition brings one of the most important and successful
scientific books of the twentieth century back into print. It
includes the entire text of the 1942 edition, Huxley's introduction
to the 1963 second edition (which demonstrates his continuing
command of the field), and the introduction to the 1974 third
edition, written by nine experts (many of them Huxley's associates)
from different areas of evolutionary biology.
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