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Brockman, Inc. Hotlist
Frankfurt Book Fair 2016
LitAg / Hall 6.3 - Tables 13A, 13B, 14A and 14B
John Brockman Katinka Matson
Russell Weinberger Max Brockman
BALANCE OF POWER
The Race Between State and Society
By Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson
[US — Penguin Press, UK — Viking, Germany — Fischer Verlag, Netherlands — Nieuw Amsterdam, Italy —
Il Saggiatore, Spain — Duesto, Brazil — Intrinseca, Greece — Livanis, Korea — Sigongsa, Taiwan —
Acropolis, Vietnam — Tre Publishing, Audio — Penguin RH; Proposal and sample chapter; 500 pages;
Delivery: December 2018]
Balance of Power is the important, groundbreaking new book by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson, authors
of Why Nations Fail, a widely acclaimed international bestseller that has sold close to half a million copies in
English, and hundreds of thousands in translations around the world.
"Balance of Power," Acemoglu and Robinson write, "develops an entirely original thesis about the diversity of
the ways in which states function, resolve conflicts, provide public services and more broadly use their powers.
It is the logical extension of a research agenda we have been developing together for twenty years, and we have
a great deal to offer on this topic. We have demonstrated our ability not only to produce original, thought-
provoking social science works but also to reach and explain our ideas to a broad audience."
DARON ACEMOGLU is the Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics in the Department of
Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was the recipient of the John Bates Clark Medal in
2005, awarded every two years to the best economist in the United States under the age of forty by the American
Economic Association, and the Erwin Plein Nemmers prize, awarded every two years for work of lasting
significance in economics. He holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Utrecht, Bosporus University,
and the University of Athens.
JAMES A. ROBINSON is an economist and political scientist who is currently one of eight University
Professors at the University of Chicago and one of only twenty-one people who have held such a position. He
has conducted research in Bolivia, Botswana, Chile, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti,
Mauritius, Mexico, the Philippines, Sierra Leone, and South Africa. He was selected as one of Foreign Policy's
"Top Global Thinkers of 2012" and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
_L t
THE JANUS POINT
A New Theory of Time's Arrows and The Big Bang
By Julian Barbour
[US — Basic Books, UK — Bodley Head; Proposal; 80,000 — 100,000 words; Delivery: November 2017]
"The Janus Point," writes Julian Barbour, visiting professor at the University of Oxford and author of The End
of Time, "proposes a novel and remarkably simple solution to one of the most fundamental problems in physics
and cosmology. It concerns the experienced direction of time: Why is the past so different from the present and
the future? This difference is encapsulated in the expression the arrow of time. It is problematic because all the
known laws of nature have exactly the same form, whatever direction, in which time is supposed to flow. The
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technical expression for this is time-reversal symmetry. This basic property seems to be entirely at odds with the
pronounced unidirectionality of experienced time. In fact, there are several arrows.
"Until recent work by myself and my collaborators Tim Koslowski and Flavio Mercati, essentially only one
proposal had been made—in well over a century—to explain why, despite the time-reversal symmetry of all the
laws of nature, these pronounced arrows of time exist, and always have existed, throughout the observable
universe. As I explain in The Janus Point, this sole explanation is a manifest stop gap and satisfies no serious
scientist.
"This has been dubbed the past hypothesis. However, it is not in any sense an explanation that follows from the
structure of the law and does not lead to any new prediction. It is an admission of defeat: Modern science fails to
explain the most profound aspects of our existence.
"The Janus Point is clearly timely because it is about a set of very simple ideas and insights that have the
potential to solve one of the deepest and longest-standing problems in physics. Everyone is interested in time
and its numerous puzzling aspects. Proof of that is the success of my earlier book The End of Time, which is still
selling more than sixteen years after its publication. Some of the ideas conjectured in that book are, in fact,
realized in the model now proposed.
"For readers, The Janus Point tells the fascinating story of one of the greatest mysteries in science and what
looks to be its unexpected and, in principle, remarkably simple solution. More than most books in popular
science, its subject resonates profoundly with the reader. Nothing touches us more intimately than the drama of
birth, life and death."
JULIAN BARBOUR, an independent researcher, is currently visiting professor at the University of Oxford. He
has devoted significant time and effort to issues that lie at the foundations of science, above all the nature of
time and motion. His first paper was published in Nature and attracted favorable editorial comment and most
importantly led to six years of very valuable collaboration with the well-known Italian theorist Bruno Bertotti. It
culminated in 1982 with a joint paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, which is now regarded
as a seminal paper on the interconnection of local dynamics with the universe at large. Barbour made a big
impact in the physics community with the publication of his book, The End of Time, in which, according to
physicist Lee Smolin, he presented "a new theory of time that is the most interesting and provocative new idea
about time to be proposed in many years."
AMERICAN KINGPIN
The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road
By Nick Bilton
[US — Portfolio, UK — Virgin Books, Audio — Penguin RH; Manuscript; 304 pages; Publication: May 2017]
From New York Times-bestselling author Nick Bilton comes a true-life thriller about the rise and fall of Ross
Ulbricht, aka the Dread Pirate Roberts, the founder of the online black market Silk Road.
In American Kingpin Bilton turns his investigative journalism to the story of Ross Ulbricht, the notorious and
enigmatic founder of a drug empire called Silk Road. This is a true-life thriller about ambition gone awry,
spurred on by the defining clash of our time: the new world of libertarian-leaning, anonymous, decentralized
web advocates and the old world of government control, order, and the rule of law. Bilton's dazzling rendering
and gift for narrative make for an endlessly fascinating drama.
In 2011, Ulbricht, a twenty-six-year-old libertarian idealist and former Boy Scout, launched "a website where
people could buy anything anonymously, with no trail whatsoever that could lead back to them." He called it
Silk Road, opened for business on the Dark Web, and christened himself the Dread Pirate Roberts (after the
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Princess Bride character). The site grew at a tremendous pace, quickly becoming a $1.2 billion enterprise where
you could buy or sell drugs, hacking software, forged passports, counterfeit cash, guns, grenades, and poisons.
The Silk Road soon caught the attention of the Feds, who embarked on an epic two-year manhunt for the site's
proprietor. Ulbricht, in the meantime, struggled to maintain control of his double life and his marketplace, which
he originally started to prove that legalizing drugs could make society safer. He gradually abandoned his
libertarian ideals to rule Silk Road with increasingly authoritarian force. At one point, he engaged the services of
hired hit men to take out employees he felt had wronged him. Soon, some of the Federal agents who were
supposed to be hunting for Ulbricht were lured into the dark world and switched sides to join him.
NICK BELTON is a special correspondent for Vanity Fair, where he writes about technology, business, and
culture, and a contributor at CNBC. He is the bestselling author of Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money,
Power, Friendship, and Betrayal (The Wall Street Journal Reader's Choice "Best Book of 2013"), which has
been optioned by Lionsgate and is currently being turned into a television series. He was a columnist for the
New York Times for almost a decade.
YOUR BRAIN IS A TIME MACHINE
The Neuroscience and Physics of Time
By Dean Buonomano
[World English — W. W. Norton, China— Huazhang, Audio — Audible; Manuscript; Pub Date: April 2017;
304 pages]
Pioneering neuroscientist Dean Buonomano examines how the brain tells time, predicts the future, and
understands the past in a book that straddles the fields of physics, psychology and neuroscience.
Few questions are as perplexing and profound as those that relate to time. Philosophers ponder what time is.
Physicists grapple with why time appears to be a one-way street, and debate whether it is a single lonely point or
a full-blown dimension. Neuroscientists and psychologists struggle to understand what it means to "feel" the
passage of time and how the brain tells it. Time is also key to the question of free will: is the future an open
path, or is it preordained by the past?
The brain, argues Buonomano, is at its core a time machine. It is the brain's ability to anticipate the actions of
prey, predators, and mates, and to predict when events will occur in a dynamically changing world, that
ultimately translate into the evolutionary currency of survival and reproduction.
The ability of animals to predict the future culminated with Homo sapiens' capacity to grasp the concept of time.
Only then were we able to craft a blade for future use, or plant a seed to quench projected hunger.
Your Brain is a Time Machine explains that, in the end, our intuitions and theories about time reveal as much
about the architecture and limitations of our brains as they do about the true nature of time.
DEAN BUONOMANO is a professor in the Departments of Neurobiology and Psychology at UCLA, and an
investigator in the Integrative Center for Learning and Memory. He is the author of Brain Bugs: How the Brain's
Flaws Shape Our Lives, which was a Wall Street Journal bestseller, and his research has been highlighted in
many national and international magazines and newspapers, including Discover, Newsweek, Scientific American,
Zeit, Cosmos, Horzu Wissen, and the New Yorker.
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SCIENCE IN THE SOUL
Selected Shorter Writings
By Richard Dawkins, Edited by Gillian Somerscales
[UK — Transworld; Manuscript; Pub Date: June 2017; 110,000 words]
A new book from Richard Dawkins, internationally bestselling author and one of the greatest scientists of our
age. As much as his full length books such as The Selfish Gene, The Blind Watchmaker, and The God Delusion,
have changed our perceptions of both science and the world it opens, his essays and articles are potent, pithy,
thought provoking and revealing windows into the world as he, himself, perceives it. Science in the Soul is a
collection of some of Dawkins' best writing: articles and lectures, reflections and polemics, reviews, forewords,
tributes or eulogies, both published and unpublished.
From the introduction, by Gillian Somerscales: "Richard Dawkins has always defied categorization. One
eminent biologist of mathematical bent reviewing The Selfish Gene and The Extended Phenotype was startled to
find a scientific work apparently free of logical errors and yet containing not a single line of mathematics; he
could come to no other conclusion than that, incomprehensible as it seemed to him, 'Dawkins . . . apparently
thinks in prose.'
"If readers of what follows here come to appreciate not only the writer's clarity of thought and facility of
expression, the fearlessness with which he confronts very large elephants in very small rooms, the energy with
which he devotes himself to explication of the complex and the beautiful in science, but also some of the
generosity, kindness and courtesy that have characterized all my dealings with Richard over the years since that
first collaboration, then the present volume will have achieved one of its aims.
"It will have achieved another if it embodies a condition felicitously described in one of the essays reproduced
here, where 'harmonious parts flourish in the presence of each other, and the illusion of a harmonious whole
emerges.' Indeed, it is my belief that the harmony resounding from this collection is no illusion, but the echo of
one of the most vibrant, and vital, voices of our times."
RICHARD DAWKINS is the former Charles Simonyi Professor For The Understanding Of Science at Oxford
University; Fellow of New College; author of The Selfish Gene, The Extended Phenotype, The Blind
Watchmaker, River out of Eden (ScienceMasters Series), Climbing Mount Improbable, Unweaving the
Rainbow, The Devil's Chaplain, The Ancestor's Tale, The God Delusion, The Greatest Show on Earth and The
Magic of Reality. He is founder of The Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science.
FROM BACTERIA TO BACH AND BACK
The Evolution of Minds
By Daniel C. Dennett
[US — W. W. Norton, UK — Penguin UK, Italy — Raffaello Cortina Editore, Holland — Atlas
Contact, China — Cheers, Audio — Recorded Books; Manuscript; Pub Date: February 2017; 448 pages]
One of the world's foremost philosophers offers a major new account of the origins of the conscious mind.
What is human consciousness and how is it possible? This question fascinates people from poets and painters to
physicists, psychologists, and philosophers. From Bacteria to Bach and Back is Daniel C. Dennett's brilliant
answer, extending perspectives from his earlier work in surprising directions, exploring the deep interactions of
evolution, brains, and human culture.
Part philosophical whodunit, part bold scientific conjecture, this landmark work enlarges themes that have
sustained Dennett's legendary career at the forefront of philosophical thought. In his inimitable style—laced
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with wit and arresting thought experiments—Dennett shows how culture enables reflection by installing a
bounty of thinking tools, or memes, in our brains. Language, itself composed of memes, turbocharged this
interplay. The result, a mind that can comprehend the questions it poses, emerges from a process of cultural
evolution.
An agenda-setting book for a new generation of philosophers and other researchers, From Bacteria to Bach and
Back will delight and entertain anyone who hopes to understand human creativity in all its wondrous
applications.
DANIEL C. DENNETT is the author of Intuition Pumps, Breaking the Spell, Freedom Evolves, and
Consciousness Explained. He is the University Professor and Austin B. Fletcher Professor of Philosophy, and
co-director of the Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University.
A CRACK IN CREATION
Gene Editing and the Unthinkable Power to Control Evolution
By Jennifer A. Doudna and Samuel H. Sternberg
[US — Houghton Mifflin, UK — Bodley Head, China — Hunan Science, Audio — Audible; Manuscript; Pub
Date: June 2017; 320 pages]
In the tradition of The Double Helix, A Crack in Creation is an insider's account of the biggest scientific
discovery of our era: a cheap, easy way of rewriting genetic code, with nearly limitless promise and peril.
Not since the atomic bomb has a technology so alarmed its inventors that they warned the world against its use.
Not, that is, until the spring of 2015, when biologist Jennifer Doudna called for a worldwide moratorium on the
use of the new gene-editing tool CRISPR to make heritable changes in human embryos. The cheapest, simplest,
most effective way of manipulating DNA ever known, CRISPR may well give us the cure to HIV, genetic
diseases, and some cancers, and will help address the world's hunger crisis. Yet even the tiniest changes to DNA
could have myriad, unforeseeable consequences—to say nothing of the ethical and societal repercussions of
intentionally mutating embryos to create "better" humans.
Writing with fellow researcher Samuel Sternberg, Doudna shares the thrilling story of her discovery, and
passionately argues that enormous responsibility comes with the ability to rewrite the code of life. With
CRISPR, she shows, we have effectively taken control of evolution. What will we do with this unfathomable
power?
JENNIFER A. DOUDNA is a professor in the Chemistry and the Molecular and Cell Biology Departments at
the University of California, Berkeley, investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and researcher in
the Physical Biosciences Division at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. She is internationally
recognized as a leading expert on RNA-protein structure and function, CRISPR biology, and genome
engineering.
SAMUEL H. STERNBERG received his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2014, and has
been a member of Jennifer Doudna's laboratory since 2010. He was a lead researcher and author of numerous
high-profile publications on the CRISPR technology. He has been awarded the RNA Society's Scaringe Award
and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center's Harold M. Weintraub Graduate Student Award, among other
honors.
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ENDURANCE
A Natural History of Exercise and Health
By Daniel Lieberman
[Proposal; Delivery: April 2019; 120,000 words]
Endurance is the new book from Daniel Lieberman, Chair of the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at
Harvard, and author of The Story of the Human Body, a New York Times bestseller. Lieberman is well known for
his unique and unusually integrative approach to research, which combines paleontology, anatomy, physiology
and experimental biomechanics.
"Endurance," Lieberman writes, "argues that we need to rethink how we think about exercise using the dual
lenses of anthropology and evolutionary biology. As the modern word 'exercise' itself implies, people today
generally think of physical activity as a pastime or a form of medicine. Most of us spend the majority of the day
sitting and then we briefly exercise in our spare time, sometimes for fun, but increasingly to ward off ill health.
Yet, until very recently, physical activity was a paradoxically fundamental part of being human: utterly
necessary but instinctively avoided. Put simply, we evolved to be reluctant endurance athletes.
"This legacy underlies and points to urgently needed solutions for today's exercise dilemma. Everyone knows
that exercise is vital for good health, yet the vast majority of Americans and others in the developed world are
unable to exercise enough. Our species endured because we had no choice but to be athletes, and if we wish our
health to endure as individuals, then we still need to make exercise indispensable today. Rather than thinking of
exercise as a 'magic pill' for good health, it is the absence of physical activity, primarily endurance exercise, that
accelerates aging and hastens death. Endurance points to a new way of understanding and solving this global
problem.
"Endurance is the product of a long journey, part intellectual, part physical. Over the last decade I have
traversed the globe to observe, often as a participant, how humans are physically active in different traditional
cultures from Africa to Greenland to India. Among other experiences, I've run barefoot and carried water on my
head in Kenya, tracked muskoxen and kudu with indigenous hunters in Greenland and Tanzania, participated in
the ancient Tarahumara ballgame under the stars in Mexico, dug millet fields in Rwanda, played barefoot cricket
in rural India, and raced on foot against horses in the mountains of Arizona. Back in my lab at Harvard, my
students and I have intensively studied the evolution, biomechanics and physiology of key human physical
activities, including how we walk, run, throw, dig, climb and even chew.
"Endurance weaves together these experiences, perspectives and insights into the form of a highly personal
natural history of first rest, then strength, and finally endurance."
DANIEL LIEBERMAN is a professor and chair of the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard.
A leader in the field of human evolutionary biology, Lieberman's research asks how and why evolution made the
human body the way it is. He is the author of The Story of the Human Body (Pantheon, 2013) and has been
published in such journals as Nature, Science, and The Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, among
others. Lieberman has been interviewed by PBS, The History Channel, NPR, BBC, Horizon, and elsewhere.
His research and discoveries have been highlighted in the New York Times, Discover, National Geographic,
Runners World, Running Times, and numerous other journals and newspapers.
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IMPROBABLE DESTINIES
Predicting the Future of Evolution
By Jonathan Losos
[US — Riverhead, UK — Allen Lane, German — Hanser, Audio — Penguin RH; Manuscript; Pub Date: June
2017; 110,000 words]
Evolutionary biologist and Harvard professor Jonathan Losos is widely known for his unique approach to
studying evolution in realtime and using experimental means. As E.O. Wilson writes, Losos is a "world leader in
research and theory of the overlapping fields of herpetology, biodiversity, and species formation."
"In the last few years," Losos writes, "evolutionary biologists have come to realize that evolution can occur
much more rapidly than Darwin and a century of subsequent biologists ever expected—fast enough, in fact, to
observe as it occurs, even during the span of a single research grant! Now that we know that evolution can
proceed rapidly, experimental studies in natural systems have begun."
Losos' work on lizards has been at the forefront of the experimental evolution movement. Using small
Bahamian islands as test tubes, he and his team have altered conditions and made predictions about how
populations should evolve in response. And the results are resoundingly consistent: evolution is extremely
predictable.
Improbable Destinies is not only about what we know about evolution, but how we know what we know. Not
just the technology and theories of science, but where the ideas come from—how researchers think them up,
how they are honed by experiences in the field, and how much of science is the serendipitous juxtaposition of
disparate ideas brought together by unexpected observations.
JONATHAN LOSOS is the Monique and Philip Lehner Professor for the Study of Latin America and professor
of organismic and evolutionary biology at Harvard University. He is the recipient of a number of awards,
including the Theodosius Dobzhansky Prize from the Society for the Study of Evolution and the David Starr
Jordan Prize from the American Society of Naturalists.
DISEMPOWERED
(working title)
By Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt
[Proposal; Delivery: 9-12 months from signing contract; 60,000 — 80,000 words]
Disempowered is an expansion to book-length of the cover story by Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt that
appeared in the September 2015 issue of The Atlantic: "The Coddling of The American Mind" (CAM).
It became the Atlantic's second most-read cover story of all time and has been referenced in hundreds of articles
in a wide variety of publications, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, National Review,
Newsweek, Los Angeles Times, Bloomberg, the Guardian, The Korea Herald, and the Irish Times; and it even
drew the attention of President Obama.
"A full-length book is necessary for several reasons," writes Lukianoff. "First, even with the article's generous
word limit, we could not present the full scope of the intersection of harmful psychological theories and political
correctness. We could only do a cursory explanation of the new reality on campus and how terms like 'trigger
warnings,' microaggressions,' and `disinvitations' suddenly rose from obscurity to become part of higher
education's and the nation's vocabulary. A full-length book allows us to cover a host of new hot topics, including
so-called 'safe spaces' and how a warped idea of safety is used to justify campus censorship, as well as campus
'bias response teams' (BRTs)—Orwellian programs that police the language students use in their private lives
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and professors use in the classroom. It is worth noting that this past spring a professor was actually investigated
by one of these BRTs for assigning CAM as class reading!
"Second, since the article was published, the situation on campus has only worsened. Within a few months after
the article's release, student demands for censorship had broken out across the country.
"Third, and possibly most importantly, we want to reactivate and deepen the discussion that we started in CAM
about the science of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) as a useful lens for looking at any number of modern
problems. CBT is a remarkably simple, successful treatment that helps patients overcome their anxiety and
depression by teaching them how to identify and combat 'cognitive distortions,' the wild mental exaggerations
in which the anxious and depressed overindulge. To our knowledge, CAM was the first and only major article to
propose that we should not only use CBT to examine our own inner thoughts, but also the world around us.
"The issue of free speech on campus is extremely hot, and will continue to be for years to come, but virtually no
one besides us is offering a solution that gets to the heart of the problem and can actually help students rather
than simply ridiculing them.
"Regarding the market, when CAM came out, it seemed that this was a uniquely American problem. But just in
the last year, it has spread throughout the UK, and is beginning to appear in Australia. In fact, there has been
major interest in CAM in the UK and European countries. In Europe, I was recently interviewed by
Siiddeutsche Zeitung, Germany's biggest daily newspaper, and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung also ran a major
article. When I recently spoke in Denmark, the president of the University of Oslo chastised me for not
knowing that all the students had read CAM and had been discussing it all year."
GREG LUKIAN01-1-, is an attorney and the president and CEO of the Foundation for Individual Rights in
Education (FIRE). He is the author of Unlearning Liberty: Campus Censorship and the End of American Debate
and Freedom From Speech. He has been published in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the New
York Times, the Los Angeles Times, TIME, the Boston Globe, Forbes, U.S. News & World Report, the Stanford
Technology Law Review, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and numerous other publications.
JONATHAN HAIDT, a social psychologist, is the Thomas Cooley Professor of Ethical Leadership at New York
University's Stern School of Business. His academic specialization is morality and the moral emotions.
Haidt is the author of two books: The Happiness Hypothesis (2006) and The Righteous Mind: Why Good People
are Divided by Politics and Religion (2012), which became a New York Times bestseller. He was named one of
the "top global thinkers" by Foreign Policy magazine, and one of the "top world thinkers" by Prospect
magazine. His three TED talks have been viewed more than 4 million times. He is the founder of
HeterodoxAcademy.org, a collaboration of professors who advocate for increasing viewpoint diversity in
universities throughout the English-speaking world.
VIGILANCE
Who We Trust, What We Believe, and Why
(working title)
by Hugo Mercier
[Proposal; Delivery: 18 months from signed contract; 100,000 words]
"What leads voters to support policies and politicians that make them worse off?" writes cognitive scientist
Hugo Mercier. "How could terrorists believe that blowing themselves up will lead to an eternity of bliss? Why
do Dalits —untouchables —endorse a worldview that confines them to the lower echelons of society? Why do
crowd members drive each other into rampaging fury? The common wisdom in psychology and in the social
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sciences: people are easy to influence, they are too trusting, and they tend to place their trust in the wrong
people. This is the answer of most social psychologists.
"They take the famous Asch conformity experiments, in which participants believe a group over the evidence of
their own eyes; and Milgram obedience experiments, in which participants agree to electrocute one another at
the experimenter's request to show that people are sheep.
"Psychologist Daniel Gilbert, a strong proponent of the view that humans are gullible, has even claimed that
people couldn't help but believe (at first at least) everything they read! Tim Levine, a leading researcher
working on lie detection, thinks that people rely on others to be trustworthy most of the time, and that as a result
they can afford to be so bad at detecting deception. Paul Ekman, the famous emotion researcher, claims that
when we see someone express an emotion, we can't help but mimic it. No surprise then that crowds and
their emotional members drive each other mad! Robert Boyd, Peter Richerson, and Joseph Henrich, proponents
of the dominant mode of cultural evolution, postulate that people are easily influenced by prestigious individuals
—wherever their prestige comes from—and consensual opinions—whatever their value.
"This is also the answer of dominant figures in anthropology and sociology, explaining the persistence of culture
by our tendency to suck in whatever ideas surround us without a second thought; in political science since the
ancient Greeks, explaining the success of demagogues by how easily people follow charismatic leaders, even
toxic ones; and in much social commentary, consider Manufacturing Consent by Edward Herman and Noam
Chomsky as an example.
"In Vigilance, I argue that they are wrong."
HUGO MERCIER is a cognitive scientist working for the French National Center for Scientific Research in
Lyon. Previously, he did a postdoc in the Philosophy, Politics and Economics program at the University of
Pennsylvania, and another one at the University of Neuchatel. He has published numerous scholarly articles on
the topic of the book, and has taught some of its contents in Europe and America. He has also made his work
more widely accessible through newspaper articles, blog posts, interviews, and public lectures. The Enigma of
Reason, a co-authored book with Dan Sperber concerning their research on "The Argumentative Theory of
Reasoning," is scheduled for publication in late May (US: Harvard University Press; UK: Allen Lane), with
several planned translations.
GENETIC RESCUE
Saving Wildlife the Way Evolution Does
By Ryan Phelan, Introduction & Epilogue by Stewart Brand
[Proposal; Delivery: 12-18 months from signed contract; 70,000 — 80,000 words]
Genetic Rescue is "the first book to present a critically important and new scientific field emerging through the
synthesis of molecular biology and conservation biology. At the heart of this intersection is the development of a
new tool kit for 21st Century conservation. Advances in comparative genomics, cloning, germ cell transmission,
ancient genome assembly, de-extinction, synthetic DNA, and genome engineering with CRISPR and gene drives
are now being applied to help solve seemingly intractable conservation problems."
Genetic Rescue makes the compelling case for human intervention in situations where the natural evolutionary
process is compromised. It is replete with specific examples of wildlife on the brink (from the black-footed
ferret to the northern white rhino) and the impact of wildlife diseases (amphibians with Chytrid disease and bats
with white-nose syndrome)."
"Genetic Rescue also presents a provocative new vision for conservation—the development of a 21st Century
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tool kit that can help prevent extinction. And more importantly, it helps frame the issues that need to be
thoughtfully considered before these new technologies can be responsibly deployed. It is the first book written
on this subject, and more importantly, it is written by an insider who is helping shape and define the field for
conservation."
RYAN PHELAN is the Executive Director of "Revive & Restore", whose mission is to increase biodiversity —
specifically through genetic rescue, helping species that are either on the brink or are already extinct. The
Introduction and the Epilogue are by cultural icon Stewart Brand, creator of The Whole Earth Catlog, and author
of The Media Lab, How Buildings Learn, and Whole Earth Discipline among many other landmark books and
projects. Brand is cofounder of "Revive And Restore" and founder of the parent organization, "The Long Now
Foundation".
THE EVOLUTION OF BEAUTY
How Darwin's Forgotten Theory of Mate Choice Shapes the Animal World — and Us
By Richard 0. Prum
[US — Doubleday, Audio — Penguin RH; Manuscript; Pub Date: May 2017; 480 pages]
A major reimagining of how evolutionary forces work, revealing how mating preferences—what Darwin termed
"the taste for the beautiful" —create the extraordinary range of ornament in the animal world.
In the great halls of science, dogma holds that Darwin's theory of natural selection explains every branch on the
tree of life: which species thrive, which wither away to extinction, and what features each evolves. But can
adaptation by natural selection really account for everything we see in nature?
Yale University ornithologist Richard Prum —reviving Darwin's own views—thinks not. Deep in tropical
jungles around the world are birds with a dizzying array of appearances and mating displays: Club-winged
Manakins who sing with their wings, Great Argus Pheasants who dazzle prospective mates with a four-foot-
wide cone of feathers covered in golden 3D spheres, Red-capped Manakins who moonwalk. In thirty years of
fieldwork, Prum has seen numerous display traits that seem disconnected from, if not outright contrary to,
selection for individual survival. To explain this, he dusts off Darwin's long-neglected theory of sexual selection
in which the act of choosing a mate for purely aesthetic reasons—for the mere pleasure of it—is an independent
engine of evolutionary change.
Mate choice can drive ornamental traits from the constraints of adaptive evolution, allowing them to grow ever
more elaborate. It also sets the stakes for sexual conflict, in which the sexual autonomy of the female evolves in
response to male sexual control. Most crucially, this framework provides important insights into the evolution of
human sexuality, particularly the ways in which female preferences have changed male bodies, and even
maleness itself, through evolutionary time.
The Evolution of Beauty presents a unique scientific vision for how nature's splendor contributes to a more
complete understanding of evolution and of ourselves.
RICHARD 0. PRUM is the William Robertson Coe Professor of Ornithology at Yale University. A lifelong bird
fanatic, Prum has published more than 100 scientific articles on diverse topics including the evolution, behavior,
song, anatomy, developmental biology, phylogenetics, paleontology, optical physics, and pigmentary chemistry
of birds. He has made ground-breaking scientific contributions to our understanding the evolutionary origin of
feathers, the physics of structural coloration, dinosaur feathers, fossil coloration, and the phylogenetic evolution
of behavior. Over the past thirty years, Prum has developed a unique scientific perspective on evolution, and he
has documented this view with major scientific discoveries.
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THE INTERACTIVE BRAIN
(working title)
By V.S. Ramachandran
[US — Penguin Press, Audio — Penguin RH; Proposal; Delivery: 24 months from signed contract; 60,000 —
70,000 words]
A new book by neuroscientist V.S. Ramachandran, author most recently of The Tell-Tale Brain.
"The Interactive Brain," writes Ramachandran, "is a tour of some of the most cherished yet elusive qualities of
our minds. The book argues that recent advances in neurosciences have contributed to a revolutionary new
model of the brain, in which brain function is controlled, not by highly specialized, hierarchical modules, mainly
hard-wired, as once thought, but rather by highly interactive modules that can shift their roles in a matter of days
or even hours The implications are not merely theoretical but have practical applications in medicine, offering
solutions for everyone from stroke patients to those with obsessive compulsive disorder.
"There are many neurological syndromes I'll discuss throughout the book. For example, a patient who was
otherwise smart and level-headed but kept insisting that his reflection in the mirror was the 'real David,' and that
the David viewing the mirror was a clone. He wiped off a tear from his eye and asked 'Dad, if the real David
returns will you disown me?' Even the axiomatic foundation of our selfhood—the notion that I'm a single
person in one body—is called into question when we encounter patients like him.
"Not only can we change our own brains, but we can change the brains of others because of the implications of
mirror neurons. The Interactive Brain incorporates case studies, such as David's, and my own research on topics
ranging through Capgras Syndrome, chronic pain, calendar synesthesia, gender incongruity, mirror visual
feedback, and obsessive-compulsive disorder, the majority of which I have not considered in detail in my
previous books.
"I conclude by visiting some of the most prized but elusive aspects of our minds considered unapproachable by
science, such as math, music, and metaphor, and suggest that these quintessentially human abilities are best
elucidated by combining an evolutionary approach with old-fashioned neurology."
V.S. RAMACHANDRAN is the director of the Center for Brain and Cognition and a professor with the
Psychology Department and Neurosciences Program at the University of California, San Diego. He is author of
Phantoms in the Brain, which has been translated into fourteen languages and formed the basis of a two part
series on Channel Four TV (UK) and a 1 hour PBS special in the USA, and more recently The Tell-Tale Brain
which was a New York Times best-seller.
t
BEHAVE
The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst
By Robert M. Sapolsky
[US — Penguin Press, UK — Bodley Head, Germany — Hanser, Holland — Ambo/Anthos, Brazil —
Companhia Das Letras, Korea — Munhakdogne, Israel — Kinneret, Audio — Penguin RH; Manuscript; 496
pages; Publication: April 2017]
"Robert Sapolsky is one of the best scientist-writers of our time, able to deal with the
weightiest topics both authoritatively and wittily, with so light a touch they become
accessible to all."
—Oliver Sacks, M.D.
The first major book from celebrated Stanford neurobiologist and author Robert Sapolsky in over a decade,
Behave answers the most basic question about human behavior: "What made you do that?" Substitute "me" or
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"us" or "they" and it's a question asked millions of times a day in all the languages of the world in response to
all manner of human behavior, good and bad.
What brings out the best in us? What brings out the worst? For every complex problem, there's a solution that's
simple, appealing, and wrong, H. L. Mencken famously said, and there are certainly many simple and wrong
answers to this most important of questions, the question at the root of the way we parent, the way we educate,
the way we manage, and the way we punish. The simple yet correct response, of course, is that it's
complicated. The longer answer? For that, the great neuroscientist and primatologist Robert Sapolsky needed
ten years, and this book.
Behave is an epic achievement. In order to make sense of all the sources that conspire to affect human behavior,
it begins in the very moment of action, when we commit the decisive deed in question. What is happening in
our brain and body at the very moment, and in the minutes that preceded it? The book then pulls back to look
how the behavior is conditioned by what the body is exposed to in the days, weeks and months leading up to
that behavior. It then goes back to childhood and adolescence, at how the bending of the bough effects how the
tree grows. And so on, from neurobiology, endocrinology and the interaction of our senses with the
environment to a lifetime's most primal shaping influences, and from there back to our genetic makeup and the
very sticky wicket of how genes and environment interact (and how they don't). Finally, Sapolsky expands the
view to take in factors that push us past any single person's inheritance and experience: namely culture, in the
present tense and back hundreds, even thousands of years, and then back millions of years, to the first humans
and the evolution of behavior.
The result is surely among the most dazzling tours d 'horizon of the science of human behavior ever attempted,
a majestic synthesis of cutting-edge research, some of it the author's own, across a range of disciplines to
provide a subtle and necessary reckoning with the roots of our most troubling and inspiring behaviors, relating
to racism, tribalism, and xenophobia; tolerance and altruism; hierarchy and competition; morality and free will;