Alan S. Miller was a professor of behavioral science at
Hokkaido University and an affiliate associate professor of
sociology at the University of Washington. He was the coauthor,
with Satoshi Kanazawa, of Why Beautiful People Have More Daughters:
From Dating, Shopping, and Praying to Going to War and Becoming a
Billionaire—Two Evolutionary Psychologists Explain Why We Do What
We Do, Why Men Gamble and Women Buy Shoes: How Evolution Shaped the
Way We Behave and Order by Accident: The Origins and
Consequences of Conformity in Contemporary Japan.
Satoshi Kanazawa is a British-American evolutionary
psychologist who is currently a reader in management at the London
School of Economics. He is the coauthor, with Alan Miller, of Why
Beautiful People Have More Daughters: From Dating, Shopping, and
Praying to Going to War and Becoming a Billionaire—Two Evolutionary
Psychologists Explain Why We Do What We Do; Why Men Gamble and
Women Buy Shoes: How Evolution Shaped the Way We Behave; and Order
by Accident: The Origins and Consequences of Conformity in
Contemporary Japan.
?A powerful jump-starter for conversations about the nature of
being human.?
?"Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
?A rollicking bit of pop science.?
?"Los Angeles Times"
?An exuberant, accessible, exhilarating, intellectually aerobic
workout.?
?David P. Barash, author of "Madame Bovary's Ovaries"
A powerful jump-starter for conversations about the nature of being
human.
"Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
A rollicking bit of pop science.
"Los Angeles Times"
An exuberant, accessible, exhilarating, intellectually aerobic
workout.
David P. Barash, author of "Madame Bovary s Ovaries"
aA powerful jump-starter for conversations about the nature of
being human.a
a"Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
aA rollicking bit of pop science.a
a"Los Angeles Times"
aAn exuberant, accessible, exhilarating, intellectually aerobic
workout.a
aDavid P. Barash, author of "Madame Bovaryas Ovaries"
?A powerful jump-starter for conversations about the nature of
being human.?
?"Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
?A rollicking bit of pop science.?
?"Los Angeles Times"
?An exuberant, accessible, exhilarating, intellectually aerobic
workout.?
?David P. Barash, author of "Madame Bovary's Ovaries"
A powerful jump-starter for conversations about the nature of being
human.
"Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
A rollicking bit of pop science.
"Los Angeles Times"
An exuberant, accessible, exhilarating, intellectually aerobic
workout.
David P. Barash, author of "Madame Bovary s Ovaries"
aA powerful jump-starter for conversations about the nature of
being human.a
a"Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
aA rollicking bit of pop science.a
a"Los Angeles Times"
aAn exuberant, accessible, exhilarating, intellectually aerobic
workout.a
aDavid P. Barash, author of "Madame Bovaryas Ovaries"
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