Matt Ridley on Evolution, Economics, and "Ideas Having Sex"
Matt Ridley, an Oxford-educated zoologist, turned to journalism
in 1983 when he got a job as The Economist's science
reporter. He soon became the magazine's Washington correspondent
and eventually served as its American editor.
Ridley has written several acclaimed books that combine clear
explanations of complex biology with discussions of the science's
implications for human society. In the reason.tv interview, Ridley
discusses some of the themes in The Red Queen: Sex and the
Evolution of Human Nature; The Origins of Virtue: Human
Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation; Genome: The
Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters; and Nature via
Nurture: Genes, Experience, & What Makes Us Human; as well
as his forthcoming book which seeks to understand how and why human
progress happens.
Paul Feine and Alex Manning interviewed Ridley in the Milton and
Rose Friedman Reading Room at Chapman University in Orange,
California.
Scroll down for embed code, iPod, HD, and audio versions.
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