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The Red Planet

Gendered Landscapes and Violent Inequalities

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The Red Planet

By: Bill Hatcher
Narrated by: Scott Brian Higgs
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About this listen

We humans have an extraordinary capacity for compassion—much of it in response to the atrocities we inflict on the planet, its animals, and each other. The popular explanation for this paradox is that we evolved as carnivorous “killer apes,” who gradually curbed our lust for violence (with frequent exceptions) by implementing humane social norms. This explanation is so well worn, especially in the American psyche, that it epitomizes cliché. So, we could be forgiven for believing it, when nearly every word is fiction. Current research shows that our original biological and social programming is nonviolent. So, what changed? What turned us from goddess-worshiping, plant-eating peacemakers into god-worshiping, animal-eating warmongers? Find out in this fresh, avant-garde nonfiction, The Red Planet: Gendered Landscapes and Violent Inequalities, and learn how our intrinsically feminine predilection for peace may yet save us.

©2024 Bill Hatcher (P)2025 Lantern Publishing & Media
Biological Sciences Civilization Evolution Evolution & Genetics Gender Studies Science Social Sciences Sociology World Solar System Mars
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