In The Trouble with Testosterone, Robert M. Sapolsky draws from his
career as a behavioral biologist to interpret the peculiar drives and
intrinsic needs of that most exotic species - Homo sapiens. With candor,
humor, and lush observations, these essays marry cutting-edge science
with a rich and compassionate humanity. Sapolsky's book ranges broadly
over the web of life, studying its details and plotting its themes.
"Curious George's Pharmacy" examines recent exciting claims that wild
primates know how to medicate themselves with forest plants. "Junk Food
Monkeys" relates the adventures of a troop of baboons who stumble onto a
tourist garbage dump. "Poverty's Remains" claims that science is as
riddled with metaphors as a Shakespearean sonnet. "Measures of Life"
begins as a witty analysis of firing squads and concludes as a dazzling
meditation on the roles and responsibilities of scientists. And in the
final essay, the brilliant and penetrating "Circling the Blanket for
God, " Sapolsky shows that science and religion emanate from the same
place: the human brain. These pieces, then, reveal the contradictions
that confront those who describe the world objectively, those who try to
reconcile the truths of the mind with the burdens of the heart.