One of my favorite discoveries in the blogoverse is the Evolutionary Psychology blog, by Rob Kurzban of the University of Pennsylvania. Evolutionary psychology had an explosive debut in the 1990s, becoming the subject of best-sellers and well-attended conferences. In recent years, a backlash has emerged, and while some criticisms have been justified, a lot of critics either attack straw men or make counterarguments that have serious flaws of their own. Evolutionary psychologists have been defending themselves, but in a relatively scattershot way. Kurzban started his blog in September, and seems to be blogging pretty consistently, and is offering some cogent and entertaining take-downs of the shabbier examples of evo-psycho backlash. I hope the backlashers jump into the comment threads!

PS–Someone has to fix the formatting on Kurzban’s blog. The excerpts look like one-sentence posts….

PPS–Talk about throwing stones from a glass house. Sorry about the headline typo. Now fixed.

Originally published October 26, 2010. Copyright 2010 Carl Zimmer.

Chris Mooney, my fellow Discover blogger, hosts a podcast called Point of Inquiry, and I’m the guest on his new episode. On the occasion of the publication of Brain Cuttings, we talk about the thinking glue that holds our brains together, Francis Collins’s views on the evolution of morality, and the future of books. Check it out!

Originally published October 25, 2010. Copyright 2010 Carl Zimmer.

On my latest podcast, I take a look at dengue fever, a viral disease that’s infecting some 50 million people a year and is even turning up in the United States. I talk to Thomas Scott of UC Davis about how this cunning virus takes advantage of human networks to spread its aches, pains, bleeding, and death. Check it out.

Originally published October 21, 2010. Copyright 2010 Carl Zimmer.

Tomorrow I’ll be in New York to host a special screening of the movie Creation, a fictionalized account of Darwin’s life starring Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connelly. It’s a collaboration between the Science and Arts program at CUNY and the Imagine Science Film Festival (for which I’m serving as judge) and the Science and Entertainment Exchange.

Before the movie, I’ll moderate a talk with the director, John Amiel; Randal Keynes, the author of the book on which the movie is based; and biologists Cliff Tabin and Sean Carroll (of deep homology fame). It should be an excellent evening.

Here are the details:

Wednesday, Oct 20, 7:00 PM
CUNY Graduate Center
Elebash Recital Hall
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

(Map)

No reservations. First come, first seated.

Originally published October 19, 2010. Copyright 2010 Carl Zimmer.