The Queen - Matt Ridley
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About the Author
MATT R I D L E Y is
the author of Nature Via Nurture: Genes,Experience, and What Makes Us Human; the critically acclaimed national bestseller Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23
Chapters; The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution ofCooperation; and the New York Times Notable Book The Red Queen: Sexand the Evolution of Human Nature. His books have been short-listed for six literary awards, including the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Formerly a scientist, journalist, and a national newspaper columnist, he is a visiting professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York and the chairman of the International Centre for Life in Newcastle, England:
THE RED QUEEN
Sex and the Evolution of
Human Nature
MATT RIDLEY
Perennial
An Imprint ofHarperCollinsPublishersFor Matthew
This book was first published in Great Britain in 1993 by Penguin Books Ltd: 1t is here reprinted by arrangement with Penguin Putnam.
THE RED QUEEN: Copyright 1993 by Matt Ridley: All rights reserved: Printed in the United States of America: No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
For information address Penguin Putnam, 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014:
HarperCollins books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use: For information please write: Special Markets Department, HarperCollins Publishers 1nc., to East 53rd Street, New York, NY
10022:
First Perennial edition published 2003.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ridley, Matt.
The red queen : sex and the evolution of human nature / Matt Ridley.1st Perennial ed:
p: cm.
Originally published: London: Viking, 1 993 : Includes bibliographical references and index: ISBN 0 - 06 -0 55 6 57-9
1: Human evolution. z. Social evolution: 3: Sex 1: Title: GN365.9R53 2.003
599 . 93 '8 -dc21
2003 04335 6
04 05 o6 07 o8 09 RRD 12. 11 to 9 8
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments ::: vii
Chapter 1 ::: HUMAN NATURE ::: I
Chapter 2 ::: THEENIGMA ::: 23
Chapter 3
::: THE POWER OF PARASITES ::: 53
Chapter 4 ::: GENETIC MUTINY AND GENDER ::: 89
Chapter 5
::: THE PEACOCK'S TALE ::: 129
Chapter 6 ::: POLYGAMY AND THE NATURE OF MEN ::: 171 Chapter 7 ::: MONOGAMY AND THE NATURE OF WOMEN ::: 209
Chapter 8 ::: SEXING THE MIND ::: 245
Chapter 9 ::: THE USES OF BEAUTY ::: 277
Chapter to ::: THE INTELLECTUAL CHESS GAME ::: 307
Epilogue ::: THE SELF-DOMESTICATED APE ::: 345
Notes ::: 351
Bibliography ::: 369
Index ::: 395
. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book is crammed with original ideasvery few of them my own. Science writers become accustomed to the feeling that they are intellectual plagiarists, raiding the minds of those who are too busy to tell the world about their discoveries. There are scores of people who could have written each chapter of my book better than I. My consolation is that few could have written all the chapters.
My role has been to connect the patches of others ' research together into a quilt.
But I remain deeply indebted and grateful to all those whose minds I raided. I have interviewed more than sixty people in the course of researching this book and have never met with anything but courtesy, patience, and infectious curiosity about the world. Many became friends. I am especially grateful to those whom I interviewed repeatedly and at length until I had almost picked their minds clean: Laura Betzig, Napoleon Chagnon, Leda Cosmides, Helena Cronin, Bill Hamilton, Laurence Hurst, Bobbi Low, Andrew Pomiankowski, Don Symons, and John Tooby.
Among those who agreed to interviews in person or by telephone, I would like to thank Richard Alexander, Michael Bailey, Alexandra Basolo, Graham Bell, Paul Bloom, Monique Borgehoff Mulder, Don Brown, Jim Bull, Austin Burt, David Buss, Tim Clutton-Brock, Bruce Ellis, John Endler, Bart Gledhill, David Goldstein, Alan Grafen,
Tim
Guilford,
David
Haig,
Dean
Hamer,
Kristen Hawkes, Elizabeth Hill, Kim Hill, Sarah Hrdy, William Irons, William James, Charles Keckler, Mark Kirkpatrick, Jochen Kumm, Curtis Lively, John Maynard Smith, Matthew Meselson, Geoffrey
::: viii :::
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Miller, Anders Moller, Atholl McLachlan, Jeremy Nathans, Magnus Nordborg, Elinor Ostrom, Sarah Otto, Kenneth Oye, Margie Profet, Tom Ray, Michael Ryan, Dev Singh, Robert Smuts, Randy Thornhill, Robert Trivers, Leigh Van Valen, Fred Whitam, George Williams, Margo Wilson, Richard Wrangham, and Marlene Zuk.
My sincere thanks also to those who corresponded with me or sent me their papers and books: Christopher Badcock, Robert Foley, Stephen Frank, Valerie Grant, Toshikazu Hasegawa, Doug Jones, Egbert Leigh, Daniel Perusse, Felicia Pratto, and Edward Tenner.
Other minds I raided more subtly, even surreptitiously.
Among those who have given advice or helped to clear my thoughts in many conversations are Alun Anderson, Robin Baker, Horace Barlow, Jack Beckstrom, Rosa Beddington, Mark Bellis, Roger Bing-ham, Mark Boyce, John Browning, Stephen Budiansky, Edward Carr, Geoffrey Carr, Jeremy Cherfas, Alice Clarke, Nico Colchester, Charles Crawford, Francis Crick, Martin Daly, Kurt Darwin, Marian Dawkins, Richard Dawkins, Andrew Dobson, Emma Duncan, Peter Garson, Anthony Gottlieb, John Hartung, Peter Hudson, Anya Hurlbert, Mark Flinn, Archie Fraser, Steven Gaulin, Charles Godfray, Joel Heinen, Nigella Hillgarth, Michael Kinsley, Richard Ladle, Richard Machalek, Seth Masters, Patrick McKim, Graeme Mitchison, Oliver Morton, Randolph Nesse, Paul Neuburg, Paul Newton, Linda Partridge, Marion Petrie, Steve Pinker, Mike Polioudakis, Jeanne Regalski, Peter Richerson, Mark Ridley (being mistaken for whom has been a great benefit to me), Alan Rogers, Vincent Sarich, Terry Sejnowski, Miranda Seymour, Rachel Smolker, Beverly Strassmann, Jeremy Taylor, Nancy Thornhill, David Wilson, Edward Wilson, Adrian Wooldridge, and Bob Wright.
Several people helped even further by reading drafts of chapters and commenting on them: Their advice was time-consuming to them but immensely valuable to me: Laura Betzig, Mark Boyce, Helena Cronin, Richard Dawkins, Laurence Hurst, Geoffrey Miller, and Andrew Pomiankowski. I owe a special debt to Bill Hamilton, to whom I returned again and again for inspiration at the early stages of this project:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
::: IX :::
My agents, Felicity Bryan and Peter Ginsberg, were unfailingly encouraging and constructive at all stages: My editors at Penguin and Macmillan, Ravi Mirchandani, Judith Flanders, Bill Rosen, and especially Carrie Chase, were efficient, kind, and inspired.
My wife, Anya Hurlbert, read the entire book, and her advice and support throughout have been invaluable.
Lastly, thanks to the red squirrel that sometimes scratched at my window while I wrote: I still don ' t know which sex it was.
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