A good alternate title: There Is No God But Evolution, and Darwin Is Its Prophet! This is an interesting book in the parts focused on biological adaptation, which wanders off into nonsense-land when it departs from that ground.
Let me open with my own biases up front. I am a Christian, with a Masters in Military History (I'm a soldier), and an interest in evolution and atheist theology. I read this book to keep up with both.
David Sloan Wilson is clearly a creative, entertaining writer. His book is at its best in the early chapters, with many examples of the amazing ways organisms adapt to their changing environments. In fact, he could have called the book "Adaptation for Everyone," since (like every book on evolution I've read) there is no example cited of a species actually turning into another species.
The book starts going astray when Wilson applies evolution to things like culture, international relations, and social improvement. The theme of the book is that evolution is the answer to all things, and that a person who can think in evolutionary terms can solve any and every problem in any field. What comes out, though, is not real solutions, but bland well-worn truisms that require no "evolutionary thinking" to deduce. For example, all of chapter 33 is devoted to proving that people whose basic needs met, and whose circumstances are good, tend to be more positive and altruistic than those in poor or harsh circumstances. No kidding, really? So the solution is to change environments so that everyone's circumstances are good. In other words, if we solve all the world's problems, we'll solve all the world's problems. Wow.
Similarly, chapters 29 - 31 are aimed at proving that we don't really need religion, just good moral principles without any "irrational" supernatural beliefs, and everything will be fine. Chapter 31 is a listing of "evolutionary wisdom" for the behaviors of nations in the "global village." It includes 'brilliant' insights such as "powerful nations should learn the virtue of humility" and "morality is required for morale." Ah, how would we know these things without Evolution to guide us? One could summarize these three chapters as "we should all just get along" - and lose no real content thereby.
What is particularly exasperating is Wilson's assumption that religious beliefs are somehow "irrational" (as he states specifically in Chapter 29). He never bothers to demonstrate why this is so - he says so, and that makes it so. It never occurs to him that he is only right if atheism is right, a position both unproven and unprovable. On the other hand, if there is a God, then it is the atheists who are irrational. Wilson spends no effort considering this - and since this belief underpins the entire argument of his book, the whole thing falls like a house of cards if that one unproven element turns out to be wrong. To use Wilson's own metaphor, a flimsy scaffold to stand on!
This book is another in a long line of evolutionist books that promise that "evolution and religion, those old enemies...can be brought harmoniously together." But what Wilson preaches is not evolution, which is a theory about the rise of bioligical diversity. No, he preaches evolutionism, the idea that evolution is everything. And he does indeed offer peace - just as soon as the religious people surrender and accept Evolution as God.
If you have an interest in the latest evolution thinking, find this book in a library like I did. Don't waste money buying it, there are better books out there.
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