The Better to Eat You With: Fear in the Animal World. Joel Berger

The Better to Eat You With: Fear in the Animal World



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The Better to Eat You With: Fear in the Animal World Joel Berger ebook pdf
Publisher:
Language: English
Page: 360
ISBN: 0226043630, 9780226043630

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*Starred Review* Famous as the physicist who first recognized the impossibility of complete quantum measurements, Werner Heisenberg has himself long resisted full assessment. But by probing deeply into archival materials unavailable when he published his scholarly study of the groundbreaking theorist (Uncertainty: The Life and Science of Werner Heisenberg, 1991), Cassidy finally delivers a complete portrait for general readers. The lucid narrative reveals the rare genius that enabled Heisenberg to claim a prominent place among the bold pioneers—including Bohr, Planck, and Schrödinger—who plumbed the mysteries of quantum mechanics. But the story that many will find most compelling focuses not on neutrons but on Nazis. Acknowledging the controversy this issue has sparked, Cassidy carefully scrutinizes Heisenberg’s role in the Nazi regime. On one hand, the record indicates that the scientist privately deplored the brutality of Hitler’s governance and that he bravely persisted in affirming the validity of Einstein’s “Jewish science.” On the other hand, Heisenberg ultimately did the bidding of Nazi leaders in advancing nuclear science that could have produced an atom bomb. Likewise disquieting is his relative passivity when Nazi leaders threatened his colleagues with imprisonment and death. A cautionary perspective on the perils of science in a world of power politics. --Bryce Christensen

Review

“The complex and nuanced interplay between predator and prey is an essential thread in the fabric of nature. Joel Berger’s substantial contributions to this emerging world view have been rendered through simplicity and elegance—by observing prey and their predators across global landscapes in a purposeful way. This book, delivered in the personalized style of a life’s journey, tells an absorbing story of how big animals alter their behavior so as to manage the risk of being eaten.”—James A. Estes, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz
(James A. Estes, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Cal )

“How long do the ghosts of monsters linger before their misty essence evaporates?  And when the monster itself (wolf, tiger, men) returns with meat hunger, how long before prey rediscover terror? What created the singular fleetness and visual acuity of pronghorn antelope? How necessary are predators and the fear of them in maintaining the resilience of wild places? Joel Berger has written a stirring adventure of wildness, prey naiveté, animal culture, and science.”—Michael Soulé, Research Professor Emeritus in Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
(Michael Soul��, Research Professor Emeritus in Environmental Studies, University )

The Better to Eat You With offers a very novel, important, and global view of the complex interrelationships between predators and prey. Science, culture, and practical issues meet head on, as they must, in a book that surely will change existing views about the role of fear in the evolution of behavior. Only world-renowned and indefatigable field biologist Joel Berger could pull off such a comprehensive analysis of how past and present must be studied as we try to figure out how all animals—nonhuman and human—will be able to share harmoniously our one and only planet in the future. Berger’s book is a landmark contribution to the study of behavior and conservation.”—Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
(Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals )

“Joel Berger is a world-class conservation scientist with a rare ability to transform knowledge into conservation action. In The Better to Eat You With he conveys the mysteries and wonder of wildlife behavior in a fast-paced narrative that both informs and inspires.”—Bill Weber, author of In the Kingdom of Gorillas
(Bill Weber, author of In the Kingdom of Gorillas )

"When ecologist Berger noticed that elk in Yellowstone were no longer afraid of wolves, who had been absent from the ecosystem for 60 years, it sparked a quest to answer three major questions: Can naive prey avoid extinction when their predators are reintroduced? To what extent can animals learn fear? And what can current behavior teach us about past extinctions and future conservation efforts? We follow Berger as he attempts to answer these questions by radio-collaring moose in below-zero temperatures in Grand Teton National Park and comparing how bison mothers in areas with wolves, areas without wolves, and areas with new wolf packs react to wolf calls. . . .The excitement and drudgery of fieldwork, combined with the author’s discoveries on how fear of predators changes the behavior of their prey, make for a book that teaches and thrills equally."—Booklist

(Booklist )

"Berger’s research involved majestic hardships and eccentric practices that included pitching carnivore dung baseball-style at browsing moose to see if they responded to the scent. He is the hairy-arsed action-man academic whose experience comes not from the lab but from the wild world. Culture is not something that divides us from the animal world: it is one more thing that links us."—Simon Barnes, Times (UK) (Simon Barnes Times (UK) )

"The Better to Eat You With builds upon the canon of important natural history literature that includes the writings of Leopold, the Muries, the Craigheads, George Shaller, E. O. Wilson, and Jacques Cousteau. . . . The book is that fine a read."—Tom Wilkinson, Jackson Hole News & Guide (Tom Wilkinson Jackson Hole News & Guide )

"[The] extraordinary first-hand accounts of elk standing placidly as wolves approach in full view and promptly slaughter them make for gripping reading. They also have profound implications for programmes seeking to reintroduce top carnivores to habitats where they have long been absent. . . . A refreshing change from the dry and preachy tone often found in conservation books."—Luis Villazon, BBC Focus (Luis Villazon BBC Focus )

"An informative, fun read."—Choice

(Choice )

"Every once in a while, one encounters a book that does not simply drive the scholar to meditation upon diverse philosophical theories, but speaks to her very mode of being-in-the-world, her practice of being human. Every once in a long while, one reads a book that changes how we see the world. This is one of those rare books. As Berger so eloquently phrases his core message, ''the question is not about wild or captive, animal or human. It is about all of us--living beings together in one place, on a single planet.'' "—Wendy C. Hamblet, Metapsychology (Wendy C. Hamblet Metapsychology )

"Berger reports solid scientific information then goes beyond it in an extraordinary effort to understand animal fear and its role in survival and reproduction. The result is a luminous account of animal individuality and emotion."—Barbara J. King, Times Literary Supplement (Barbara J. King Times Literary Supplement )



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