Incoming Resources
- The vertigo of late modernity, Jock Young
- On the origin of tepees, the evolution of ideas (and ourselves), Jonnie Hughes
- Active hope, how to face the mess we're in without going crazy, Joanna Macy & Chris Johnstone
- Homo mysterious, evolutionary puzzles of human nature, David P. Barash
- Switch, how to change things when change is hard, Chip Heath and Dan Heath
- Population wars, a new perspective on competition and coexistence, Greg Graffin
- Wired for Culture, Origins of the Human Social Mind, Mark Pagel
- This could be our future, a manifesto for a more generous world, Yancey Strickler
- Captives, How Stolen People Changed the World, Catherine M. Cameron
- Unbound, how eight technologies made us human, transformed society, and brought our world to the brink, Richard L. Currier, PHD
- The humans who went extinct, why Neanderthals died out and we survived, Clive Finlayson
- A foot in the river, why our lives change--and the limits of evolution, Felipe Fernández-Armesto
- Guns, germs, and steel, produced by Lion TV for National Geographic Television & Film ; series producer, Cassian Harrison ; executive producers, Michael Rosenfeld, Richard Bradley
- This view of life, completing the Darwinian revolution, David Sloan Wilson
- The problem of war, Darwinism, Christianity, and their battle to understand human conflict, Michael Ruse
- Cultural evolution, people's motivations are changing, and reshaping the world, Ronald F. Inglehart, University of Michigan
- Millennium, from religion to revolution : how civilization has changed over a thousand years, Ian Mortimer
- How change happens, Cass R. Sunstein
- The third wave, by Alvin Toffler
- How change happens, Duncan Green