
Survival of the dishiest
The useless beauty of male birds is evidence of something evolutionists long struggled to accept: female agency.
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The useless beauty of male birds is evidence of something evolutionists long struggled to accept: female agency.
By Kathleen JamieHow a marked rise in the treatment of certain conditions – physical and mental – is harming, not protecting, public…
By Hannah BarnesThe great scientist strays into speculation in The Genetic Book of the Dead, his latest defence of his “selfish gene”…
By Tim FlanneryA reluctant celebrity who coined the term “radioactivity”, she transformed the perception of women in science.
By Anjana AhujaOur understanding of the earliest humans is shaped by contemporary beliefs about race, violence and sex.
By Ann ManovMagic Pill, Johann Hari’s study of the rise of diet drugs, sheds light on our deeply dysfunctional food culture.
By Sophie McBainFrom sex to eating, birth to body temperature, our physical selves do what our chemical masters tell us.
By Pippa BaileyCaroline Crampton’s history of hypochondria shows how the internet has exacerbated health anxiety.
By Pippa BaileyIn Why We Die, Venki Ramakrishnan demolishes the crackpots and billionaires behind the anti-ageing industry.
By Anjana AhujaThe philosophy of magic inspired the founders of modern science. Now it feeds the delusions of Silicon Valley.
By John GrayPsychoanalyst Darian Leader’s study of the motivations behind sex and desire is irredeemably bonkers.
By Sophie McBainA radical new history argues that human society was shaped not by hunter-gatherer skills but the bodies of our female…
By Sophie McBainThe overnight success of Bonnie Garmus’s debut novel is almost as improbable as its contrived plot.
By Pippa BaileySimon Schama wants the post-pandemic world to learn from the case of Waldemar Haffkine: a tragic story of how prejudice…
By Stephen BuranyiJonathan Kennedy’s Pathogenesis reveals how diseases have built and broken empires and economies.
By Kathleen JamieWhat communities devoted to hero-worship tell us about the psychology of belonging.
By Ellen Peirson-HaggerAlso featuring M John Harrison's Wish I Was Here and Jonathan Miles on the French Riviera.
By Sophie McBain, Christiana Bishop, Michael Prodger and Ellen Peirson-HaggerLeah Hazard’s new book shows how this complex, life-giving muscle has been maligned and misunderstood.
By Sophie McBainAlso featuring Pegasus by Laurent Richard and Sandrine Rigaud and Sensational by Ashley Ward.
By Oscar Williams, Tom Gatti, Ellen Peirson-Hagger and Michael ProdgerJustin Gregg’s witty exploration of animal intelligence is a useful guide – but there is more to human life than…
By John Gray