Dr Justin Gregg is a senior research associate with the Dolphin Communication Project and adjunct professor at St. Francis Xavier University where he lectures on animal behaviour and cognition. He received his PhD from the School of Psychology in Trinity College Dublin, having studied dolphin social cognition. As a science writer, he has written for The Wall Street Journal, Aeon Magazine, Scientific America, BBC Focus, Slate, and others, and he regularly lectures on topics related to animal minds. He currently lives in rural Nova Scotia, where he writes about science and contemplates the inner lives of the crows that live near his home.
I love the book and everyone should read it
*Ryan Holiday*
If Nietzsche Were A Narwhal makes some extraordinary and
thought-provoking points. It is not only engagingly written, but
its controversial thesis is worth taking seriously... some of the
cognitive concepts introduced...are nothing less than
brilliant.
*Wall Street Journal*
Beautiful, thought-provoking, and often hilarious
*BBC Science Focus*
Gregg's clever and provocative book is full of irreverent notions
and funny anecdotes - the creative upside to being a human animal.
But our ability to abstract from our immediate experience means we
can take that creativity too far....undeniably entertaining
*New York Times*
A dazzling, delightful read on what animal cognition can teach us
about our own mental shortcomings. You won't just tear through this
book in one sitting - you'll probably want to invite Justin Gregg
over for dinner to spend more time inside his brilliant mind. This
is one of the best debuts I've read in a long time, and I dare you
to open it without rethinking some of your basic ideas about
intelligence.
*Adam Grant*
I defy you not to be interested by this book - it finds a novel way
of getting at very deep questions about who we are and what it
means, and does so with clear-eyed compassion and a certain humor
that softens the conclusion a bit
*Bill McKibben*
Combining first rate story-telling with the latest research on
animal minds and cognitive psychology, If Nietzsche Were A Narwhal
is the rare book that will cause readers to think deeply about big
questions and moral issues and to laugh out loud on nearly every
page. I loved it.
*Hal Herzog*
If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal is a book full of observations as
surprising and off-the-beaten-path as its title. It's
scientifically very well informed. It's not a treatise - it's a
pleasure.
*Carl Safina*
I felt dumber after reading this book. Mission accomplished,
Justin!
*David Grimm*
We've heard that a mind is a terrible thing to waste, but have you
ever considered that having a human mind is more a bane than a
gift? Justin Gregg's delightful and provocative book melds science
with anecdote to explore that question. Read it, have your
preconceptions challenged, and feel some humility. It might do you
good.
*Jonathan Balcombe*
A highly original take on the nature of intelligence across life
forms. Simultaneously thought -provoking and delightfully humorous,
Justin Gregg guides readers into an essential re-thinking of human
exceptionalism. This is a welcome upending of all we have been
molded to believe about humans and other animal minds.
*Lyanda Lynn Haupt*
This is an important book to read if you want to understand animals
for what they are - not as cardboard cutouts, or as furry humans.
Animal minds aren't in competition with us, although Gregg makes a
good case that if they were, they would win hands down. The idea
that human intelligence may be nothing more than a failed
evolutionary dead end, gives humanity an important challenge to
which we must rise.
*Arik Kershenbaum*
What's it like to be a bat, a bee, or a bed bug? In this
enthralling book, Justin Gregg offers a window into the minds of
other creatures, and debunks many of the myths of human
exceptionalism. He makes the provocative argument that human
thinking may be complex, but it is by no means superior - and its
unique qualities could even be the cause of our species' ultimate
downfall. If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal is both a humbling and
awe-inspiring read.
*David Robson*
A funny, perceptive book that answers questions we've been told not
to ask. Like many of the great sages, Justin Gregg uses animal
stories to treat deep questions of consciousness and justice. The
result is a deft field guide to the mixed blessings of intelligence
and the real possibility that consciousness (and joy) exist
perfectly well without it.
*William Poundstone*
A sparkling and witty tour of the many minds we share this planet
with. Nietzsche might be surprised to find himself contemplated in
the company of beasts from narwhals to slugs - but the fascinating
and detailed payoff of the cognitive lives of so many animals is
immense.
*Clive Wynne*
Enlightening! If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal is a hilarious and
thrilling look at intelligence that asks: are humans really the
best? Gregg will dazzle and sweep you off your feet with his
detailed exploration of the animal kingdom and its many secrets.
This is an absolute must-read.
*Wednesday Martin*
If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal is an unusual, delightful, and
entertaining book that will help us achieve a more precise
understanding of human nature, counterintuitively by looking at our
reflection in light of the clues of conscious behavior expressed by
our fellow animals. I loved Dr. Gregg's book because I learned
quite a few interesting things from each chapter. As a scholar, I
can offer no higher praise. Highly recommended.
*Oné R Pagán*
If Nietzsche were a Narwhal is a beautiful, thought-provoking and
often hilarious exploration of this planet's different kinds of
minds. Justin Gregg points out that while many of the hallmarks of
human intelligence are also found, in some form, in animals from
insects to narwhals, humans are by all means exceptional. But our
intelligence is still constrained by our evolutionary history; we
may be too intelligent for own good, and too stupid to look after
our planet with a sufficiently long-term planning perspective.
Gregg's magnificent book is a poignant reminder that if we don't
raise our game fast, we might once again cede Earth to the rule of
insects and other supposedly less intelligent creatures.
*Lars Chittka*
[If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal] challenges deep-seated ideas about
the superiority of human intelligence by contrasting it with
stories of animals who've gotten along just fine without it
*Publishers Weekly*
A fascinating take on human intelligence.
*Kirkus Reviews*
Wonderfully accessible and charmingly narrated, this is a
fascinating investigation of intellect and cognition
*Publishers Weekly*
(An) entertaining and original book...Gregg is a brilliant
communicator of complex ideas, with a writing style that is rich in
both humour and detail. His argument is also surprisingly
convincing.
*PD Smith, Guardian*
So many of our narratives describe how our mega-human brains have
allowed us to conquer the world. But these brains have also led us
to a point where we might make ourselves extinct. And crucially, do
they make us any happier? These are deep and important questions;
Gregg harnesses his marvellous human brain to also make them really
funny. This is a great way to get acquainted with the current
understanding of other animal intelligence and an interesting
corrective to our anthropocentric instincts.
*BBC Science Focus*
Justin Gregg's witty exploration of animal intelligence is a useful
guide - but there is more to human life than a search for
contentedness... No one who reads Gregg's witty and instructive
book will come away without having learnt some humbling truths
about themselves and their animal kin. His argument is twofold. He
details instances of intelligent behaviour which show that
attributes believed to be uniquely human are present, in varying
degrees, in animals, birds, fish and insects. On the other hand, he
suggests that in humans these attributes come at a price.
Consciousness - the hallmark of the human species in many
philosophies - is double-edged in precisely this way.
*New Statesman*
'By melding science, history and philosophy, the book becomes a
highly readable, and on occasion quite surprising, tour of the
limits of consciousness.'
*The Times*
'His understanding of human and animal cognition provides real
insight into how we think, why our brains have evolved to think
that way, and what we might want to do about it - since, perhaps
uniquely as a species, we can.'
*Financial Times*
'A fascinating work of popular science... Accessible and
insightful, it's a thought-provoking read.'
*The Observer*
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