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Comments on The Lucifer Principle
"A revolutionary vision of the relationship between psychology and history. The Lucifer Principle
will have a profound impact on our concepts of human nature. It is astonishing that a book of this
importance could be such a pleasure to read." Elizabeth F. Loftus, immediate past president, American
Psychological Society, author of Witness for the Defense and The Myth of Repressed Memory
"Readers will be mesmerized by the mirror Bloom holds to the human condition, and dumbfounded
by the fusillade of eclectic data that arrives with the swiftness and intensity of a furious tennis volley.
His style is effortless, engaging, witty and brisk.... He draws on a dozen years of research into a jungle
of scholarly fields...and meticulously supports every bit of information...." Washington Post
"Unlike anything you've ever read before. An act of astonishing intellectual courage." Leon Uris
"a philosophical look at the history of our species, which alternated between fascinating and
frightening. Reading it was like reading Dean Koontz or Stephen King: I couldn't put it down.
...Masterful.... Best Non-Fiction Book of the year." Mark Graham, Rocky Mountain News
"Bloom's work marshals a quantity of evidence reminiscent of Darwin's 1859 Origin of Species." Dorion
Sagan, Wired
"Addresses a topic that more timid and conventional sources are not inclined to confront: the nature
and causes of human evil. ...Vigorous...fervent...a freshly viable theory of human social evolution." The
Washington Times
"Great fun to read, and crammed with fantastic information." Martin Gardner, creator and author of
The Scientific American's "Mathematical Games" section 1956-1986, author of over 100 books,
including The Annotated Alice: The Definitive Edition
"Provocative...explosive...feisty...a string of rhetorical firecrackers that challenge our many forms of
self-righteousness." Chet Raymo, Boston Globe
"Elegant...the highest quality of brain food...[a] revolutionary new vision of human nature...[a]
monumental work...heady stuff from a wonderful, original thinker...simply stunning...." Lawrence
Hall, Newark Star-Ledger
"The Lucifer Principle is a tour de force, a brilliant and seminal work." Sol Gordon, founder, The
Institute for Family Research and Education, author of When Living Hurts
"Draws heavily on biological and anthropological evidence to show that human beings are not by
nature isolated, self-interested individuals but have powerful natural inclinations toward social
groups, and that much of the violence and cruelty that has characterized human history is rooted in
competition between groups for status and domination." Francis Fukuyama, Foreign Affairs
"Challenging" Horace Barlow, Royal Society Research Professor of Physiology, Cambridge University
<< < GO > >>
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iii
Comments on The Lucifer Principle
"A revolutionary vision of the relationship between psychology and history. The Lucifer Principle
will have a profound impact on our concepts of human nature. It is astonishing that a book of this
importance could be such a pleasure to read." Elizabeth F. Loftus, immediate past president, American
Psychological Society, author of Witness for the Defense and The Myth of Repressed Memory
"Readers will be mesmerized by the mirror Bloom holds to the human condition, and dumbfounded
by the fusillade of eclectic data that arrives with the swiftness and intensity of a furious tennis volley.
His style is effortless, engaging, witty and brisk.... He draws on a dozen years of research into a jungle
of scholarly fields...and meticulously supports every bit of information...." Washington Post
"Unlike anything you've ever read before. An act of astonishing intellectual courage." Leon Uris
"a philosophical look at the history of our species, which alternated between fascinating and
frightening. Reading it was like reading Dean Koontz or Stephen King: I couldn't put it down.
...Masterful.... Best Non-Fiction Book of the year." Mark Graham, Rocky Mountain News
"Bloom's work marshals a quantity of evidence reminiscent of Darwin's 1859 Origin of Species." Dorion
Sagan, Wired
"Addresses a topic that more timid and conventional sources are not inclined to confront: the nature
and causes of human evil. ...Vigorous...fervent...a freshly viable theory of human social evolution." The
Washington Times
"Great fun to read, and crammed with fantastic information." Martin Gardner, creator and author of
The Scientific American's "Mathematical Games" section 1956-1986, author of over 100 books,
including The Annotated Alice: The Definitive Edition
"Provocative...explosive...feisty...a string of rhetorical firecrackers that challenge our many forms of
self-righteousness." Chet Raymo, Boston Globe
"Elegant...the highest quality of brain food...[a] revolutionary new vision of human nature...[a]
monumental work...heady stuff from a wonderful, original thinker...simply stunning...." Lawrence
Hall, Newark Star-Ledger
"The Lucifer Principle is a tour de force, a brilliant and seminal work." Sol Gordon, founder, The
Institute for Family Research and Education, author of When Living Hurts
"Draws heavily on biological and anthropological evidence to show that human beings are not by
nature isolated, self-interested individuals but have powerful natural inclinations toward social
groups, and that much of the violence and cruelty that has characterized human history is rooted in
competition between groups for status and domination." Francis Fukuyama, Foreign Affairs
"Challenging" Horace Barlow, Royal Society Research Professor of Physiology, Cambridge University
<< < GO > >>