<div><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Straw-Dogs-Thoughts-Humans-Animals/dp/0374270937/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_b">http://www.amazon.com/Straw-Dogs-Thoughts-Humans-Animals/dp/0374270937/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_b</a></div>
<div><span id="btAsinTitle"></span> </div>
<div><span>Book by British Philosopher John Grey, from the London School of Economics: "Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals" </span></div>
<div>------------------</div>
<div>In a work of thoroughgoing iconoclasm, British philosopher Gray attacks the belief that humans are different from and superior to animals. Invoking pure Darwinism, he savages every perspective from which humans appear as anything more than a genetic accident that has produced a highly destructive species (<i>homo rapiens</i>)--a species that exterminates other species at a phenomenal rate as our swelling numbers despoil the global environment. Gray explains the human refusal to confront the darker realities of our nature largely as the result of how we have consoled ourselves with the myths of Christianity and its secular offspring, humanism and utopianism. Human vanity, he complains, has even converted science (which should teach us of our insignificant place in nature) into an ideology of progress. But neither hope for progress nor confidence in human morality passes muster with Gray, who envisions a future in which the human population finally contracts as a world politics that grows ever more predatory and brutal shatters all such illusions. As a work of ruthless rigor, this provocative book will force readers to reexamine their own convictions. </div>
<div> </div>
<div><i>Bryce Christensen</i><br>-------------------------------------------</div>
<div>Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett</div>