Amazon.ca:Customer reviews: The Social Conquest of Earth
Skip to main content
.ca
Hello Select your address
All
Select the department you want to search in
Hello, Sign in
Account & Lists
Returns & Orders
Cart
All
Best Sellers Deals Store Customer Service New Releases Prime Fashion Sell Electronics Home Books Toys & Games Health & Household Sports & Outdoors Coupons Computers Gift Cards Gift Ideas Kindle Books Computer & Video Games Pet Supplies Automotive Grocery Beauty & Personal Care Home Improvement Baby Audible Registry Subscribe & save
Prime Video
Today's Deals Watched Deals Outlet Deals Warehouse Deals Coupons eBook Deals Subscribe & Save

  • The Social Conquest of Earth
  • ›
  • Customer reviews

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
432 global ratings
5 star
71%
4 star
17%
3 star
8%
2 star
2%
1 star
2%
The Social Conquest of Earth

The Social Conquest of Earth

byEdward O. Wilson
Write a review
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
See All Buying Options

Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Libra
4.0 out of 5 starsthe rarity of evolving to the fully human
Reviewed in Canada on May 26, 2016
Edward O. Wilson is a delight to read. I found his summery of the evolution of man incredibly comprehensive ....fascinating actually.
I studied anthropology at university. However, I found Wilson's overview of the 5-6 million year journey of the 'almost-man' primate's journey on becoming Man, more skillfully detailed, more comprehensive and certainly, more illuminating than anything I learned in my university classes
The most difficult chapters in this book are written about the invertebrate eusocials. Even though Wilson makes every effort to write for the lay reader, the conceptual framework and corresponding patterns of their evolution, is difficult to understand.
However, it was worth the effort to continue reading, because without Wilson's explanation about this extremely rare evolutionary path taken by ants, wasps, bees and termites,the reader's overall understanding of the almost miraculous evolution of homo sapiens would not be complete.
Wilson not only demonstrates how we humans evolved, but by explaining the extreme rarity of the evolution of the eusocial invertebrates, we are shown the almost miraculous feat achieved when the upright ape became fully human.
Overall, I was thrilled to learn more about this rare, evolutionary journey taken by our ancestors, a journey that led to our becoming fully human.
Read more
One person found this helpful

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Jacques cyr
3.0 out of 5 starsThe Social Conquest of Earth
Reviewed in Canada on March 26, 2013
I particularly appreciated the beginning and the end. The middle part was to technical for me to remember, however it did give me an idea of the scope of the subject.
Read more
One person found this helpful

Search
Sort by
Top reviews
Filter by
Verified purchase only
5 star only
Text, image, video
Filtered by
5 star, Verified purchasesClear filter
307 total ratings, 183 with reviews

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.

Translate all reviews to English

From other countries

PUNKARI YRJÖ M
5.0 out of 5 stars The Social Conquest of Earth
Reviewed in Germany on December 1, 2020
Verified Purchase
The book was fine until Wilson start to write human sociality. Eusociality is known since 1966 and as a concept of sociality it is useful. But it is not sufficient to account human sociality which as cultural system belongs to different level.
Report abuse
Hugh Small
5.0 out of 5 stars The dicovery of altruism
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 14, 2012
Verified Purchase
E. O. Wilson has ignited a valuable debate about how altruism evolved in humans. As an insect specialist he more or less put 'inclusive fitness' or 'Hamilton's rule' on the map as natural selection's preferred mechanism for the evolution of altruism. Then in a famous 2010 article in Nature, and now in The Social Conquest of Earth he says that he was completely wrong and that 'group selection' is how altruism evolved in both eusocial insects and humanity. By group selection Wilson means war to the death between groups - 'total war'. This idea has been around a long time; Darwin believed it, talking off the top of his head without any archaeological evidence about what happened during the two million years of humanity's evolution, and misled by an idea ('Pangenesis') that learned experience was passed down from generation to generation. Recently Samuel Bowles published a paper in Science showing mathematically that warfare could preserve a fragile form of altruism if a mutation for it occurred. Wilson now makes the startling claim that because Bowles's archaeological data shows warfare 'from the beginning of Neolithic times', therefore 'tribal aggressiveness thus goes back well beyond Neolithic times, but no one as yet can say exactly how far'. He then goes on to speculate that because the common chimpanzee is warlike 'there is a good chance' that tribal aggressiveness goes back six million years. The reality is that once you look beyond inclusive fitness (which is one way that altruism can evolve in some creatures) there are many ways that altruism can evolve in humans. People love the idea that warfare delivers benefits, possibly because it reassuringly exorcises war's horrors and apparent inevitability in the modern world. A careful reading of the Bowles paper shows that he has proved that a supposed altruistic gene could be preserved by group selection without warfare, simply because of the climate. His model also describes a population with a small minority of Ned Flanders types with this altruistic gene, whereas real research shows that altruism is universal and not binary. Wilson's mathematical colleague Martin Nowak and the behavioural ecologists use 'multilevel selection' in a much more subtle sense than Wilson's old fashioned 'total war between groups'. It is from them that we are finding out the truth about our altruism, and the controversy ignited by Wilson's book will end up by proving him wrong again.
26 people found this helpful
Report abuse
dominic
5.0 out of 5 stars brilliant
Reviewed in India on August 28, 2018
Verified Purchase
E. O. Wilson at his usual brilliant self.
Report abuse
Grace Cristina Chacón leon
5.0 out of 5 stars A new step
Reviewed in Spain on April 28, 2013
Verified Purchase
Wilson has made another point in the study of behaviour, absolutely deep. A necessary insight in this topic. A must read.
Report abuse
santiago rubio de casas
5.0 out of 5 stars excelente exposición del estado de la cuestión en ética evolutiva
Reviewed in Spain on May 7, 2013
Verified Purchase
excelente exposición del estado de la cuestión en ética evolutiva, por el padre de la sociobiología que ha superado sus tesis, algo simplistas, iniciales
Report abuse
Translate review to English
Mrs ruth ca grant
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 12, 2015
Verified Purchase
as promised
Report abuse
John
5.0 out of 5 stars Eusociality rules, OK
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 10, 2012
Verified Purchase
An excellent book, supportng an idea (selection at the level of the group)which is important for the social sciences but has been trashed by a lot of apparently repectable scientists such as Richard Dawkins and Jerry Coyne
Report abuse
Artyom
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read book if you want to understand what makes us who we are
Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2020
Verified Purchase
What brought me to reading this book was Edward O. Wilson famous quote “We built a Star Wars civilization, with Stone Age emotions, medieval institutions and godlike technology”

The book will tell you the complete story of what this quote represents in a concise format.

It’s definitely meant for an average reader, doesn’t require deep scientific knowledge but certain level of scientific literacy for sure.

You’ll love the book. Enjoy.
13 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Phillip Skaga
5.0 out of 5 stars We are the conquerors, now what?
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2016
Verified Purchase
This book is a logical prelude to, and continuation of thoughts in "The Meaning of Human Existence". In this one, written in 2007, can be seen much of the detail leading to Wilson's concern about human eusociality and our tech threatened future. The two together constitute one very lucid argument about concern humans should have about earth's future. This book is much more detailed and therefore more difficult to simply summarize. Chapter titles are one means of understanding a close relationship between the two as an argument from science about life now and in future. Coincidentally I read the second first and vice versa but from page one the commonality of an underlying argument is very clear. Our 'first conquest of earth' was a unique 'event' in the past 4+ billion years of earth's existence. That little summary alone makes this book worth the read even if not followed by 'meaning of human existence'.
The problem with books of this sort is that they do not have a much, much broader reader appeal. To ultimately stimulate broad human concern, let alone action, the messages must be almost universally understood by the billions of human now on earth and the millions more to come perhaps sooner than for which humanity can usefully plan. Change portrayed in both books fits an exponential curve covering billions of years with an asymptote not far away from the present. Kurzweil and others suggest that to be in or around 2050 CE, about three decades from 2016.
7 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Jane K from Athens, GA
5.0 out of 5 stars a most important book to read
Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2013
Verified Purchase
This is one of the most important books I've read in a long time. It lays out the fundamentals of humanity's biological and social evolution on this planet. Wilson states that humans are "by any conceivable standard...life's greatest achievement...are the mind of the biosphere, the solar system, and--who can say?--perhaps the galaxy." But we are creatures who have at once "...created a Star Wars civilization, with Stone Age emotions, medieval institutions, and god-like technology. We thrash about. We are terribly confused by the mere fact of our existence, and a danger to ourselves and to the rest of life."

In the beginning of the book, Wilson discusses eusociality, a stage of social evolution in which "group members are made up of multiple generations and are prone to perform altruistic acts as part of their division of labor." Humans are among the relatively few species on the planet ever to have evolved to a level of eusociality. (So are ants and bees, which are not given short shrift in the book.)

The main argument Wilson proposes is that eusociality has evolved by "group selection" and NOT by "inclusive fitness" (kin selection). Inclusive fitness was the accepted wisdom from around the 60s to the 90s. It says that, "kinship plays a central role in the origin of social behavior. In essence, it says that the more closely related individuals in a group are, the more likely they are to be altruistic and cooperative, hence the more likely are the species that formed such groups to evolve into eusociality." Inclusive fitness has "powerful intuitive appeal" but does not hold up to scientific scrutiny and mathematical evaluation, he argues.

Group selection, on the other hand, proposes that it is hereditary altruists forming "groups so cooperative and well-organized as to outcompete nonaltruist groups."

In the end, Wilson argues that human eusociality is a product of multilevel natural selection. "At the higher level of the two relevant levels of biological organization, groups compete with groups, favoring cooperative social traits among members of the same group. A the lower level, members of the same group compete with one another in a manner that leads to self-serving behavior. The opposition between the two levels of natural selection has resulted in a chimeric genotype in each person. It renders each of us part saint and part sinner." (p. 289)

The other important concept that is covered is that of "gene-culture coevolution," which deals with the causal relation between the evolution of genes and the evolution of culture--briefly, that "many properties of human social behavior are affected by heredity... and that the innate properties of human nature must have evolved as adaptations."

I've used mostly quotes from the book in writing this review because I didn't want to get it wrong. A couple of the chapters were difficult reading for me, so I read and re-read and looked stuff up on the Web to get a better understanding. It was definitely worth the effort.

This book should be one of the basic starting points for everyone who is interested in how humanity might understand itself better in order to leave aside some of the beliefs that are causing us to do so much damage.
10 people found this helpful
Report abuse
  • ←Previous page
  • Next page→

Need customer service? Click here
‹ See all details for The Social Conquest of Earth

Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations
›
View or edit your browsing history
After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages that interest you.

Back to top
Get to Know Us
  • Careers
  • Amazon and Our Planet
  • Investor Relations
  • Press Releases
  • Amazon Science
Make Money with Us
  • Sell on Amazon
  • Amazon Associates
  • Sell on Amazon Handmade
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Independently Publish with Us
  • Host an Amazon Hub
Amazon Payment Products
  • Amazon.ca Rewards Mastercard
  • Shop with Points
  • Reload Your Balance
  • Amazon Currency Converter
  • Gift Cards
  • Amazon Cash
Let Us Help You
  • COVID-19 and Amazon
  • Shipping Rates & Policies
  • Amazon Prime
  • Returns Are Easy
  • Manage your Content and Devices
  • Customer Service
EnglishChoose a language for shopping.
CanadaChoose a country/region for shopping.
Amazon Music
Stream millions
of songs
Amazon Advertising
Find, attract, and
engage customers
Amazon Business
Everything for
your business
Amazon Drive
Cloud storage
from Amazon
Amazon Web Services
Scalable Cloud
Computing Services
 
Book Depository
Books With Free
Delivery Worldwide
Goodreads
Book reviews
& recommendations
IMDb
Movies, TV
& Celebrities
Amazon Photos
Unlimited Photo Storage
Free With Prime
Shopbop
Designer
Fashion Brands
 
Warehouse Deals
Open-Box
Discounts
Whole Foods Market
We Believe in
Real Food
Amazon Renewed
Like-new products
you can trust
Blink
Smart Security
for Every Home
 
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Notice
  • Interest-Based Ads
© 1996-2022, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates