The origin of politics : human nature and the shaping of political systems / Nicholas Wade.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780063379787 (hardcover)
- Physical Description: 241 pages ; 24 cm
- Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: New York : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, [2025]
- Copyright: ©2025
Content descriptions
| Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
| Formatted Contents Note: | The folly of ignoring human nature -- To remake the world -- Rise of monogamy, fall of tribalism -- Evolution has shaped the human mind -- The evolutionary structure of human nature -- Institutions, the sinews of society -- Politics of the First Societies-- How states develop and get rich -- Sexual strategies and differences -- Undermining the family -- The state and inequality -- The genetics of political attitudes -- Social glues and the nation state -- The nation state and the United States -- Restraining warfare -- The politics of human nature. |
Search for related items by subject
| Subject: | Political science > Anthropological aspects. Political sociology. State, The. |
Available copies
- 0 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
| Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lakeshore Branch | 306.2 Wad | 31681010434686 | NONFIC | Checked out | 01/01/2026 |
- Baker & Taylor
Draws on evolutionary biology, anthropology, and history to argue that political ideologies often fail by ignoring fixed aspects of human nature, contending that while some social policies align with evolved behaviors, others provoke dysfunction by assuming limitless human adaptability. - HARPERCOLL
Societies that ignore social disintegration and collapsing birth rates are putting their future in peril. So why are we ignoring the signs?
?In The Origin Of Politics, Nicholas Wade explains how our political systems compete with a more ancient set of rules for organizing societyâthose developed by evolution. Modern ideologies are in constant tension with structures inherent in human social behavior, such as the family, the tribe, and male-dominated institutions.
This tension plays out in various ways. Sometimes nature prevails over politics, as in the proposal by Marx and Engels to eliminate the family, the basic unit of society. The founders of the kibbutz movement put this radical idea into practice, only to find that the conflict with human nature was unsustainable. In other cases, culture has successfully modified evolutionary behaviors, replacing polygamy with monogamy and dissolving the bonds of tribalism to make way for modern states.
But the evolutionary framework of human societies is not infinitely flexible. The nation-state, especially in the case of the United States, is prone to disintegration if disruptive ideologies are allowed to undermine the cohesive affinities that hold its disparate cultures together.
The worldwide decline in fertility in most countries except those in Africa signals a severe derangement in the behaviors evolution has devised for ensuring that a population will maintain itself. If the causes of this disruption cannot be understood and reversed, human societies will embark on an unsought path to extinction.
Other fraught issues in which human biology and politics conflict include the innate specializations of the sexes, the stratification of society by ability, and the mismatch between the inequalities of wealth-creating societies and the egalitarian ethic inherited from our hunter-gatherer ancestors.
We live in an iridescent bubble, the intoxicating richness of modern culture. Shielded from the natural world, we have lost our awareness of the evolutionary forces that still guide our motivations and shape the foundations of our societies. The Origin of Politics explores the risks of underestimating evolutionâs fundamental role in human affairs.
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