The book is both now aieand very, very changing and provocative. It's written for the lay reader mind, like bits about chicken in it that you the film parasitet, and inmonstthe quite hard. So if you're not ready to commit to buying the book, can just scogo page hardon, what do we do with the science of terrible men? And i think it's a good introduction to many of these issues.
The subject of genetic inheritance provokes passionate debate but behavioural geneticist Kathryn Paige Harden believes both sides are getting it wrong. It’s possible, she argues, to reclaim the science of genetics while avoiding the trap of categorising traits as superior or inferior. Drawing from her new book, The Genetic Lottery, Harden shares her research uncovered as head of the Developmental Behavior Genetics lab at University Texas with Helen Lewis, staff writer at The Atlantic.
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