Original Sin: The Genetics of Wrongdoing, the Problem of Blame and the Future of Forgiveness
Autor Kathryn Paige Hardenen Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 feb 2026
In Original Sin, she weaves together insights from her own experience as a daughter, mother, wife and scientist with cutting-edge research in genetics and psychology to grapple with some of the most important questions in modern life: How do we take responsibility for the people we become, knowing how we are shaped by both biology and experience? How should we respond when people hurt each other - or themselves? And has science made guilt obsolete?
Navigating the psychological and biological terrain of addiction, antisocial behaviour and violence, Harden confronts the discomforting ways science unsettles our understanding of wrongdoing and choice. In doing so she asks us not to absolve, but to reckon differently with notions of fairness and blame. A revelatory inquiry into the uneasy space where human behaviour meets inherited biology, Original Sin challenges us to imagine a more humane vision of accountability - for ourselves and for one another.
| Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
|---|---|---|
| Paperback (1) | 84.02 lei 3-5 săpt. | +46.50 lei 4-10 zile |
| Orion Publishing Group – 3 mar 2026 | 84.02 lei 3-5 săpt. | +46.50 lei 4-10 zile |
| Hardback (2) | 150.60 lei 3-5 săpt. | +18.73 lei 4-10 zile |
| Orion Publishing Group – 4 feb 2026 | 150.60 lei 3-5 săpt. | +18.73 lei 4-10 zile |
| Random House – 3 mar 2026 | 163.15 lei Precomandă |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781399604338
ISBN-10: 1399604333
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 142 x 218 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Orion Publishing Group
Colecția W&N
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1399604333
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 142 x 218 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Orion Publishing Group
Colecția W&N
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Recenzii
A tour de force. Original Sin is a thoughtful and thought-provoking book that invites us to go deep into questions about why people do terrible things and how we should treat them afterwards. Harden's discussion is deepened by her personal reflections on her own responses to hurt and cruelty - a rare mixture, showing how the scientific and the personal perspective combine in a rich complementarity. I loved this book
A daring, complex, sometimes confounding and ultimately powerful tapestry of a book . . . [moves] with propulsive momentum and elegant logic from dog-training and child-rearing to corporal punishment, mass incarceration and, ultimately, hope for the future
An extraordinary book, the very best of science writing, because it is not just about science, but is memoir, history, bleeding-edge genetics and a completely original take on original sin. Thrilling, entertaining, provocative, brilliant
Original Sin is an ambitious, compact and often moving contribution to the literature at the intersection of genetics and ethics. It is magnificent to have an established scientist such as Harden address social, political, religious and deeply personal issues in the context of scientific work meant for public consumption. The book should serve as a nucleation point for broad, intense and enlightening discussion
What makes Original Sin so readable apart from damned good writing is a sincere and palpable search for the safety of a god in what we're beginning to know. It's not only part of the solution to a human future but a blind date with the meaning of life. Anyone with a beating heart and a hungry mind should eat this up
A powerful read that stops you dead in your tracks and forces you to think very deeply
Regardless of the side you take in the nature vs nurture debate, Kathryn Paige Harden's Original Sin offers an eye-opening perspective on possible genetic links to antisocial behaviour. Those who can accept that there is nothing inherently amoral about having an unconventional experience of emotion will see the potential life-changing and positive impact this understanding can have on stigmatised and marginalised antisocial youth
Unique, expansive and illuminating - a mix of religion and genetics that interweaves intensely personal storytelling with rigidly objective science to explore big questions about the bad things we have the capacity to do
Even if you have no interest in the concept of sin, this is a compelling read. Harden's bottom line is that we subjective beings are morally responsible for our actions (sorry), despite the fact that we also tick along deterministically. This emotionally startling and intellectually erudite book explains why
Wonderful. Popular science these days, in its understandable desire to attract readers, can feel overly simplistic. But Harden's fascinating personal revelations never obscure the fact that what she has written is an undeniably intellectual and moral book. We need more of this kind of writing, and I absolutely loved it
A brave, open-hearted examination of how our glitchy brains make sense of what our imperfect bodies do
This perspective-shattering exploration of how genetics complicate our ideas about blame, punishment and moral responsibility is like no other science book I have ever read
A daring, complex, sometimes confounding and ultimately powerful tapestry of a book . . . [moves] with propulsive momentum and elegant logic from dog-training and child-rearing to corporal punishment, mass incarceration and, ultimately, hope for the future
An extraordinary book, the very best of science writing, because it is not just about science, but is memoir, history, bleeding-edge genetics and a completely original take on original sin. Thrilling, entertaining, provocative, brilliant
Original Sin is an ambitious, compact and often moving contribution to the literature at the intersection of genetics and ethics. It is magnificent to have an established scientist such as Harden address social, political, religious and deeply personal issues in the context of scientific work meant for public consumption. The book should serve as a nucleation point for broad, intense and enlightening discussion
What makes Original Sin so readable apart from damned good writing is a sincere and palpable search for the safety of a god in what we're beginning to know. It's not only part of the solution to a human future but a blind date with the meaning of life. Anyone with a beating heart and a hungry mind should eat this up
A powerful read that stops you dead in your tracks and forces you to think very deeply
Regardless of the side you take in the nature vs nurture debate, Kathryn Paige Harden's Original Sin offers an eye-opening perspective on possible genetic links to antisocial behaviour. Those who can accept that there is nothing inherently amoral about having an unconventional experience of emotion will see the potential life-changing and positive impact this understanding can have on stigmatised and marginalised antisocial youth
Unique, expansive and illuminating - a mix of religion and genetics that interweaves intensely personal storytelling with rigidly objective science to explore big questions about the bad things we have the capacity to do
Even if you have no interest in the concept of sin, this is a compelling read. Harden's bottom line is that we subjective beings are morally responsible for our actions (sorry), despite the fact that we also tick along deterministically. This emotionally startling and intellectually erudite book explains why
Wonderful. Popular science these days, in its understandable desire to attract readers, can feel overly simplistic. But Harden's fascinating personal revelations never obscure the fact that what she has written is an undeniably intellectual and moral book. We need more of this kind of writing, and I absolutely loved it
A brave, open-hearted examination of how our glitchy brains make sense of what our imperfect bodies do
This perspective-shattering exploration of how genetics complicate our ideas about blame, punishment and moral responsibility is like no other science book I have ever read