The Arrogant Ape

Hardcover / ISBN-13: 9781408717721

Price: £22

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‘I wish this book had been published five hundred years ago and been compulsory reading ever since’ Jay Griffiths, author of How Animals Heal Us
‘A crucial and transformative read’ Charles Foster, author of Being a Beast
‘Timely, intelligent and entertaining’ Tristan Gooley, author of How to Read a Tree
‘Will leave you in awe’ Justin Gregg, author of If Nietzsche Were A Narwhal

Most people are certain that humans are the most intelligent, sophisticated, successful species on earth. But what if we’re wrong? And what if our arrogant human exceptionalism is leading us to exploit the earth at the expense of other species – and destroy our own world in the process?

In The Arrogant Ape, leading primatologist Christine Webb challenges our belief in human superiority by revealing underappreciated wonders of nonhuman life – from the language of songbirds and prairie dogs, to the cultures of chimpanzees and reef fishes, to the acumen of plants and fungi. She shows how human exceptionalism has even crept into the sciences, distorting how we study and understand other species. With fresh research into the rich social, emotional and cognitive lives of animals, and compelling stories from all over the world, The Arrogant Ape demonstrates how our belief in our own importance is directly linked to some of the greatest threats against us and our environment – and offers a hopeful, inspiring way forwards.

Reviews

Christine Webb's powerful new book is both a carefully crafted unpacking of the errors behind human exceptionalism and a practical guide to how we can unlearn our species arrogance. She draws from her intimate knowledge of great apes and a deep and evidenced empathy for other living beings. Building on the legacy of her mentor, Frans de Waal, Webb's book is a passionate call on us to shape a better world as the 'humble' apes of the future
Melanie Challenger, author of How to be Animal
In her landmark book, Christine Webb makes clear that the notion that we're the most important show in town - smarter than, better than, more important than, uniquely exceptional, above, and separate from other animals - has got it all wrong. This distorted view of humans in which we use ourselves as some sort of standard to which individuals of other species should strive is not only arrogant, but singularly ill-informed. I highly recommend The Arrogant Ape. We need a new mindset, a paradigm shift in which we decenter ourselves and work alongside other species to change the dismal road on which we are currently and recklessly traveling
Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
I wish this book had been published five hundred years ago and been compulsory reading ever since
Jay Griffiths, author of How Animals Heal Us
The Arrogant Ape is a multidisciplinary takedown of anthropocentrism. Bursting with vivid firsthand accounts of encounters with wild animals and a survey of cutting-edge research into animal cognition, Webb offers a deeply considered, self-reflective, and undeniably philosophical approach to the scientific study of animal behavior. Christine Webb is spearheading a paradigm shift in science; deftly folding in Indigenous and phenomenological perspectives to forge a hybrid approach to empirical knowledge-seeking. Her book is a modern exploration of the ancient speciesism problem, leading the reader toward a hopeful appeal that we can dispel our culturally acquired forms of anthropocentrism in service of a humbler path to understanding both the animal mind and humanity's connection to the natural world. Webb will leave you in awe
Justin Gregg, author of If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal
A thrilling, disconcerting, ultimately hopeful exposé of our species' self-regarding prejudices. Webb puts us in our place (and a fine place that is, in fact), showing us how much more fascinating the world is if we see it as it is, rather than denigrating it and using it as a mere resource. A crucial and transformative read
Charles Foster, author of Cry of the Wild
A timely, intelligent and entertaining book that deserves our attention
Tristan Gooley, author of How to Read a Tree