Why do people behave in such unreasonable, ineffective ways? Why can't
we get along? Renowned science writer L. Sprague de Camp explains that
some of our counterproductive and self-destructive tendencies are the
result of humans spending over a million years foraging through the
African savannah for food, grubbing for edible roots, and chasing other
scavengers away from the kills of abler predators. In these activities
we see our highly competitive nature and our tendency to view others as
adversaries. De Camp examines our global "wrong-headedness" by
considering the qualities that served as survival traits in our
primitive past. This book is social anthropology at its best!