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THE NAKED APE by DESMOND MORRIS
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THE NAKED APE (original 1967; edition 1969)

by DESMOND MORRIS

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
3,011524,952 (3.77)45
In this anthropological study which places man, distinguished by the nakedness of his skin, alongside the apes and monkeys, the author "examines man's fundamental motives and behavior ... Human feeding, grooming, sleeping, fighting, mating, and taking care of the young are reviewed."
Member:StatesmanJoe
Title:THE NAKED APE
Authors:DESMOND MORRIS
Info:JONATHAN CAPE (1969), Hardcover
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:Animal-Human bond, Man

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The Naked Ape: A Zoologist's Study of the Human Animal by Desmond Morris (1967)

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» See also 45 mentions

English (37)  Portuguese (Brazil) (3)  Portuguese (Portugal) (2)  Spanish (2)  Catalan (2)  Dutch (1)  Danish (1)  Hungarian (1)  French (1)  Italian (1)  Turkish (1)  All languages (52)
Showing 1-5 of 37 (next | show all)
Погледът на един биолог към човека като проста голокожа маймуна.

Авторът описва биологичните ни и поведенчески характеристики на човека и спекулира относно тяхното еволюционно значение и произход. За съжаление се опитва да отиде отвъд биологията и да дава мнения относно социалната организация и даже политика, от които очевидно нищо не разбира.

Книгата е добра в биологичната си част, ако не сте чели нищо друго относно еволюцията на човека ще ви информира за основните аспекти относно защо сме това, което сме - защо ядем месо, защо ходим на два крака и нямаме косми, защо живеем на семейства и групи и т.н.

Пазете се обаче от изводите на автора относно всичко останало. Само за пример ще дам позицията, която нееднократно заявява, че бъдещето на човешкия вид изисква популационен контрол, за да се предотвратят ескалация на вътревидово насилие и социален срив - теза, базираща се на експерименти с мишки и неприемана сериозно от който и да е сериозен изследовател на проблема. ( )
  Longanlon | Nov 19, 2024 |
For decades I've been considering, off & on, reading The Naked Ape. It's very old now, yes, but I still might. Consider that the author, Desmond Morris, is quoted with attributing a certain description to Homo Sapiens: "This unusual and highly successful species spends a great deal of time examining his higher motives and an equal amount of time ignoring his fundamental ones."
  Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Oct 18, 2024 |
Book 159.
The Naked Ape.
Desmond Morris.
We both read this in 1975 and I found it on the bookshelf and took it to Spain to read again.
Absolutely fascinating!
My favourite chapters were sex and rearing. I want to know how he got some of his facts and figures! (See page 52 below)
Interesting things like why a schoolmaster would demand a boy to lower his trousers before thrashing him, why so many girls as young as 4 would choose a horse as their favourite animal (mounting an animal for a long series of rhythmic movements with legs spread wide).
Yes this book had feminists and female scientists rolling their eyes.
I will read it again.
Chloe Betty you might find it interesting?
"Morris said that Homo sapiens not only have the largest brains of all higher primates, but that sexual selection in human evolution has caused humans to have the highest ratio of penis size to body mass. Morris conjectured that human ear-lobes developed as an additional erogenous zone to facilitate the extended sexuality necessary in the evolution of human monogamous pair bonding. Morris further stated that the more rounded shape of human female breasts means they are mainly a sexual signalling device rather than simply for providing milk for infants."
9.5/10 ( )
  janicearkulisz | Jul 30, 2024 |
This book was maybe the beginning of my slow realization that we humans, no matter how special we believe we are, are still very much a part of nature. ( )
  mykl-s | Aug 12, 2023 |
Okay, this was an interesting book, until I read "The Descent of Women" and the author basically eviscerated a lot of points made here. So I was watching these Stamford University behavioral biology lectures, and the professor said of evolutionary biology that it's basically about "who tells the best story." I mean, you look at the biology of humans and you get a lot of information, but to a certain degree it's just clues. There are a lot of guesses. Why do we have a lot of hair on our heads and not much elsewhere on our bodies? What kind of evolutionary advantage might that have had? The other thing that we shouldn't forget about genetics is that mutations are random, a lot of them don't have an advantage or disadvantage, and some of them were chosen not because they were advantageous, but because of an event like genetic bottleneck (for example, a volcano randomly kills most of the animals without that trait and suddenly that's the main trait not because it's better but because of a random volcano). So yes, "The Naked Ape" tells a good story, but I don't think it tells the best one or gives the best supporting evidence. ( )
  t1bnotown | Jul 17, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 37 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (14 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Morris, Desmondprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Bolle, FritzTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Ferrer Aleu, J.Translatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Nicolaas, ThomasTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Rijk, Peter deEditorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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There are one hundred and ninety-three living species of monkeys and apes.
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One of the strangest features of previous studies of naked-ape behaviour is that they have nearly always avoided the obvious. The earlier anthropologists rushed off to all kinds of unlikely corners of the world in order to unravel the basic truth about our nature, scattering to remote cultural back-waters so atypical and unsuccessful that they are nearly extinct. They then returned with startling facts about the bizarre mating customs, strange kinship systems, or weird ritual procedures of these tribes, and used this material as though it were of central importance to the behaviour of our species as a whole. The work done by these investigators was, of course, extremely interesting and most valuable in showing us what can happen when a group of naked apes becomes side-tracked into a cultural blind alley. It revealed just how far from the normal our behaviour patterns can stray without a complete social collapse. What it did not tell us was anything about the typical behaviour of typical naked apes. This can only be done by examining the common behaviour patterns that are shared by all the ordinary, successful members of the major cultures—the mainstream specimens who together represent the vast majority. Biologically, this is the only sound approach. Against this, the old-style anthropologist would have argued that his technologically simple tribal groups are nearer the heart of the matter than the members of advanced civilizations. I submit that this is not so. The simple tribal groups that are living today are not primitive, they are stultified. Truly primitive tribes have not existed for thousands of years. The naked ape is essentially an exploratory species and any society that has failed to advance has in some sense failed, ‘gone wrong’. Something has happened to it to hold it back, something that is working against the natural tendencies of the species to explore and investigate the world around it. The characteristics that the earlier anthropologists studied in these tribes may well be the very features that have interfered with the progress of the groups concerned. It is therefore dangerous to use this information as the basis for any general scheme of our behaviour as a species.
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In this anthropological study which places man, distinguished by the nakedness of his skin, alongside the apes and monkeys, the author "examines man's fundamental motives and behavior ... Human feeding, grooming, sleeping, fighting, mating, and taking care of the young are reviewed."

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