One of the world's top behavioural geneticists argues that we
need a radical rethink about what makes us who we are.
Robert Plomin is a leading behavioural geneticist who works at King's College, London. He has published more than 800 papers in scientific journals and is the author of the best-selling textbook in the field. In 2012, he was awarded a highly prestigious five-year Advanced Investigator Award from the European Research Council. He was the youngest president of the international Behaviour Genetics Association, and has been given lifetime achievement awards from that association as well the American Psychological Association and the Society for Research in Child Development, among others.
It is a hugely important book - and the story is very well told.
Plomin's writing combines passion with reason (and passion for
reason) so fluently that it is hard to believe this is his first
book for popular consumption, after more than 800 scientific
publications. His story is crucial.
*The Times*
An important book, a must-read guide to one enormous aspect of the
human future
*Sunday Times*
I cannot tell you how well thumbed this book is . . . every single
person listening to me qualifies to read this book because it's
about human beings . . . this is our story
*BBC Radio London*
A challenging and thought-provoking new book.
*Daily Mail*
Important new evidence in a never-ending argument
*The Evening Standard*
You can't read the book without seeing the world afresh.
*Observer (Books of the Year)*
An extraordinary book
*BBC HARDtalk*
Plomin writes with authority about the ongoing genomic revolution
that will unquestionably transform our lives and society.
*The Guardian*
No-one should be making any proposals about how to improve
education without being aware of the contents of, and ideally
having read, Robert Plomin's new book, Blueprint. Uncomfortable,
but essential reading.
*Dylan William, Emeritus Professor at the Institute of
Education*
Plomin takes recent genetic research and draws some provocative
conclusions.
*The Guardian*
What Plomin is saying at the moment is controversial, but it is a
message that every teacher needs to at least consider carefully and
objectively.
*Times Educational Supplement*
A clear and engaging explanation of one of the hottest (and most
interesting) fields in science, by perhaps its most distinguished
practitioner
*Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard
University, and author of The Blank Slate and Enlightenment
Now*
Some blueprint, that creates the rainbow spectrum of humanity!
Plomin is a masterful teacher as well as brilliant scientist. He
coolly lays out the astonishing new evidence that genetic
differences matter far more than environmental ones in producing
individual differences in ability and character, and argues
passionately that, if we want to build a fair society, we must plan
accordingly
*Nicholas Humphrey, Emeritus Professor of Psychology, London School
of Economics*
This fascinating book, by the doyen of behavioural genetics,
provides a superb introduction to the genetics of who we are. It is
beautifully written and very challenging, but it is a challenge
that we all need to reflect on
*Sir Richard Layard, emeritus professor of economics at LSE and the
author of Happiness and Thrive*
Some blueprint, that creates the rainbow spectrum of humanity!
Plomin is a masterful teacher as well as brilliant scientist. He
coolly lays out the astonishing new evidence that genetic
differences matter far more than environmental ones in producing
individual differences in ability and character, and argues
passionately that, if we want to build a fair society, we must plan
accordingly
*Nicholas Humphrey, emeritus professor of psychology at the London
School of Economics and author of Consciousness Regained and Soul
Dust*
Robert Plomin's research has been educating us about environmental
and genetic influences on psychological characteristics for
decades. This is an accessible and pacy summary of the field's
accumulated results, with provocative future-gazing on the uses of
genetic material for prediction about people's lives
*Ian Deary, professor of differential psychology at the University
of Edinburgh*
Robert Plomin's engaging book, drawing on his 35 years of research
experience, makes the complex field of behavioural genetics
accessible for a non-expert reader. An important work, Blueprint
calls for a society-wide conversation to debate the ethics of this
new knowledge and our responsibilities, as this shouldn't just be
left in the hands of geneticists
*Simon Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at
Cambridge University and author of Zero Degrees of Empathy*
If anyone is going to write a book that challenges deeply held
beliefs about who we are, it is Plomin: a psychologist with 45
years' experience in research, but with an undimmed passion for his
subject.
*Tes Magazine*
Plomin finally finds himself at the crest of the wave as cutting
edge research begins to back what have long been theories and
hypotheses.
*Guardian Books podcast*
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