Description

Book Synopsis
*A controversial but optimistic book about humanity's increasing co-operation and our technological future

Trade Review
Wright has constructed an interesting thesis... bold and thought-provoking. * SUNDAY TIMES *
Not only a fascinating read but an important one. * INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY *
One of the main layman's objections to the supposedly random process of evolution is that for all its inherent pointlessness, evolution seems to have a goal, a narrative, a conscious direction. And that direction is towards complexity. Germs become animals. Apes become humans. Blood-caked Aztec savages become liberal-minded East Coast essayists. Now Robert Wright, author of the much-praised The Moral Animal, has come along with a contentious new book to tell us that the layman has been on to something all along. Evolution does have a goal. * The title of Wright's book comes from games theory, which divides human interactions into "zero sum games", where for every winner there's a loser, and "non-zero sum games", where everyone gains. Wright's aim is to knit together this theory with anthropol *
The author's learning is lightly worn. Sometimes too lightly. After a while his chatty, hey-let's-have-a-beer style starts to grate: "When was the last time you invented a boomerang?"; "Ah, Tahiti!". There are also some minor errors, like his claiming tha * Sean Thomas, AMAZON.CO.UK REVIEW *

Nonzero

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    £12.34

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    RRP £12.99 – you save £0.65 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 16 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Robert Wright

    3 in stock

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      Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
      Publication Date: 06/09/2001
      ISBN13: 9780349113340, 978-0349113340
      ISBN10: 0349113343

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      *A controversial but optimistic book about humanity's increasing co-operation and our technological future

      Trade Review
      Wright has constructed an interesting thesis... bold and thought-provoking. * SUNDAY TIMES *
      Not only a fascinating read but an important one. * INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY *
      One of the main layman's objections to the supposedly random process of evolution is that for all its inherent pointlessness, evolution seems to have a goal, a narrative, a conscious direction. And that direction is towards complexity. Germs become animals. Apes become humans. Blood-caked Aztec savages become liberal-minded East Coast essayists. Now Robert Wright, author of the much-praised The Moral Animal, has come along with a contentious new book to tell us that the layman has been on to something all along. Evolution does have a goal. * The title of Wright's book comes from games theory, which divides human interactions into "zero sum games", where for every winner there's a loser, and "non-zero sum games", where everyone gains. Wright's aim is to knit together this theory with anthropol *
      The author's learning is lightly worn. Sometimes too lightly. After a while his chatty, hey-let's-have-a-beer style starts to grate: "When was the last time you invented a boomerang?"; "Ah, Tahiti!". There are also some minor errors, like his claiming tha * Sean Thomas, AMAZON.CO.UK REVIEW *

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