Democrat and Republican. Meat Eaters and Vegetarians. Black and White. As human beings we sort ourselves into groups. And once we identify ourselves as a member of a particular group-say, Red Sox fans-we tend to feel more comfortable with others of our own kind, rather than, say, Yankees fans. Yet we all belong to multiple groups at the same time-one might be a woman, a mother, an American, a violinist. How do we decide which identities matter and why they matter so much? And what makes us willing to die for, or to kill for, a religion, a nation, or a race?
In this award-winning book, David Berreby describes how twenty-first-century science is addressing these age-old questions. Ably linking neuroscience, social psychology, anthropology, and other fields, Us and Them investigates humanity’s “tribal mind” and how this alters our thoughts, affects our health, and is manipulated for good and ill. From the medical effects of stress to the rhetoric of politics, our perceptions of group identity affect every part of our lives. Science, Berreby argues, shows how this part of human nature is both unexpectedly important and surprisingly misunderstood.
Humans need our tribal sense-it tells us who we are, how we should behave, and links us to others as well as the past and future. Some condemn this instinct, while others celebrate it. Berreby offers in Us and Them a third alternative: how we can accept and understand our inescapable tribal mind.
“[A] brave book. . . . Berreby’s quest is to understand what he sees as a fundamental human urge to classify and identify with ‘human kinds.'”-Henry Gee, Scientific American
Recent Posts
- Embracing Humanity: Why We Need Science, Philosophy, and Spirituality to Understand Free Will and Personal Agency November 3, 2024
- Spice, Silver, and Slavery: How Global Trade Shaped the Rise of the West November 2, 2024
- Science and Personal Insight: Two Sides of the Same Coin October 5, 2024
- Exploration and Colonisation: The World between 1450 and 1600 September 27, 2024
- The Emergence of a Second Renaissance: September 16, 2024
Archives
- November 2024 (2)
- October 2024 (1)
- September 2024 (3)
- August 2024 (3)
- July 2024 (5)
- June 2024 (3)
- May 2024 (5)
- April 2024 (4)
- March 2024 (2)
- February 2024 (2)
- January 2024 (1)
- November 2023 (2)
- October 2023 (2)
- September 2023 (3)
- August 2023 (1)
- July 2023 (1)
- June 2023 (1)
- May 2023 (7)
- April 2023 (6)
- March 2023 (2)
- February 2023 (1)
- January 2023 (5)
- December 2022 (2)
- October 2022 (1)
- September 2022 (1)
- August 2022 (1)
- July 2022 (2)
- June 2022 (1)
- March 2022 (1)
- February 2022 (1)
- January 2022 (2)
- May 2021 (1)
- April 2021 (1)
- March 2021 (2)
- February 2021 (1)
- November 2020 (1)
- October 2020 (3)
- September 2020 (1)
- July 2020 (1)
- May 2020 (4)
- April 2020 (1)
- June 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (2)
- April 2019 (1)
- March 2019 (1)
- June 2018 (1)
- December 2017 (1)
- July 2017 (2)