Robin Dunbar is Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Oxford. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and of the Royal Anthropological Institute, and an elected Foreign Member of the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters. He has been awarded the Osman Hill Medal and the Huxley Medal. His popular science books include The Human Story, How Many Friends Does One Person Need? and Human Evolution, and have been translated into a dozen languages.
Stimulating and hugely ambitious... A compelling intellectual
workout. Dunbar offers a powerful central argument, an excellent
survey of alternative theories and a wide range of vivid and
illuminating examples... The story he tells is important to us
all
*Observer*
Dunbar's intellectual interests are far-ranging, and he is as
sure-footed talking about human cognition as congregation sizes...
How Religion Evolved is learned, readable and sweeping (in the best
sense of that word)... Hard to argue with
*Financial Times*
When one of the most creative, insightful, and versatile
evolutionary thinkers of our time turns his scientific gaze toward
religion, it is no surprise that he delivers a landmark book that
completely reshapes our understanding of religious belief,
experience, and practice. In How Religion Evolved, Dunbar not only
raises fundamental questions that previous scholars of religion
have ignored, he offers novel solutions in a comprehensive
narrative that is as engaging as it is informative. A gifted
scientist and writer has given anyone interested in religion a
genuine gift
*Richard Sosis, James Barnett Professor of Humanistic Anthropology,
University of Connecticut*
A book with impressive intellectual sweep
*Financial Times*
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