A wide-ranging exploration of how animals have wired our brains and shaped the way we live, from the cave art of the earliest humans to the most cutting-edge of contemporary neuroscience.
A fascinating study of what it means to be both human and animal, ANIMATE shows that to better understand ourselves, we must pay more attention to the other beings with whom we share our world.
In ANIMATE, science writer Michael Bond explores how animals have profoundly influenced our minds and cultures. Drawing on cutting-edge insights from psychology, anthropology, literature and neuroscience, Bond traces the varied ways their lives have affected ours, from our hunter gatherer ancestors whose brains were rewired by the prey they hunted and the predators they feared, to the medieval and Enlightenment thinkers who used animals to promote notions of human supremacy. Scientists today are challenging the assumption that we are separate from and superior to animals, showing that they too possess intelligence, empathy, creativity and even the ability to use tools. If everything that supposedly makes us human is shared with other creatures, where does that leave us? And if we are not as exceptional as we previously thought, how should we be treating the animals we live alongside?
Michael Bond is a writer specializing in human behaviour and a former editor and reporter at New Scientist. He won a British Psychological Society Book Award for THE POWER OF OTHERS while his acclaimed WAYFINDING: THE ART AND SCIENCE OF HOW WE FIND AND LOSE OUR WAY has been translated into five languages.



