The Evolution of Beauty with Richard O. Prum – Nov 18
Monday November 18, 2019

Public Lecture Series with Richard O. Prum
What
can explain the incredible diversity of beauty in nature? A celebrated
Yale ornithologist turns to a neglected idea of Darwin’s for answers and
transforms the way we understand sex, pleasure, and evolution itself.
In The Evolution of Beauty, Richard O. Prum’s award-winning
career as an ornithologist and his lifelong passion for bird watching
come together in a thrilling intellectual adventure. Scientific dogma
holds that every detail of an animal’s mating displays– every spot on
the peacock’s tail– is an advertisement of its genetic or material
superiority to potential mates. But 30 years of research and fieldwork
around the world led Prum to question this idea. Deep in tropical
jungles are birds with a dizzying array of plumages, songs, and mating
displays: Club-winged Manakins who sing with their wings, Great Argus
pheasants who dazzle prospective mates with a four-foot-wide cone of
feathers covered in golden 3D spheres, Red-capped Manakins who moonwalk.
Many such traits struck Prum as outlandishly unlikely to provide
practical information. His search for answers led him to a
little-acclaimed theory of Darwin’s, aesthetic mate choice, or “the
taste for the beautiful.” Darwin proposed that choosing a mate for the
mere pleasure of it creates an independent engine of evolutionary
change.
With warmth, wit, and a charming virtuosity, Prum explores how Darwin’s
idea was sidelined by squeamish Victorians and what it means for our
understanding of evolution to revive it 150 years later. Prum not only
looks at birds differently—finding surprising and uplifting discoveries
in the violent world of duck sex –he connects the same evolutionary
dynamics to the origins and diversity of human sexuality. He offers
riveting new thinking about the evolution of human beauty, the female
orgasm, and same-sex sexual behavior. And in the book’s intellectual
climax, he proposes an essential role for female mate choice in shaping
human maleness, transforming our ancestors from typical infanticidal
primates into socially intelligent, pair bonding caregivers.
The Evolution of Beauty is an exhilarating tour de force that
begins in the trees and ends by fundamentally challenging how we
understand human evolution and ourselves.
RICHARD O. PRUM is William Robertson Coe Professor of
Ornithology at Yale University, and Head Curator of Vertebrate Zoology
at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. He is a winner of
MacArthur and Guggenheim Fellowships and helped discover dinosaur
feathers and their colors.
Date: Monday, November 18
Time: 6:00 pm Check-in, 7:00 pm Program
Location: Club Headquarters, 46 E 70th Street, NY, NY, 10021
Member Ticket Price: $15
Guest Ticket Price: $30
Student Ticket Price: $5 with a valid academic ID on arrival
Reservation Notes:
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