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The Origins of You

By: Jay Belsky, Avshalom Caspi, Terrie Moffitt, Richie Poulton
Narrated by: Susie Berneis
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Publisher's Summary

After tracking the lives of thousands of people from birth to midlife, four of the world’s preeminent psychologists reveal what they have learned about how humans develop.

Does temperament in childhood predict adult personality? What role do parents play in shaping how a child matures? Is daycare bad - or good - for children? Does adolescent delinquency forecast a life of crime? Do genes influence success in life? Is health in adulthood shaped by childhood experiences? In search of answers to these and similar questions, four leading psychologists have spent their careers studying thousands of people, observing them as they’ve grown up and grown older. The result is an unprecedented insight into what makes each of us who we are.

In The Origins of You, Jay Belsky, Avshalom Caspi, Terrie Moffitt, and Richie Poulton share what they have learned about childhood, adolescence, and adulthood, about genes and parenting, and about vulnerability, resilience, and success. The evidence shows that human development is not subject to ironclad laws but instead is a matter of possibilities and probabilities - multiple forces that together determine the direction a life will take. A child’s early years do predict who they will become later in life, but they do so imperfectly. For example, genes and troubled families both play a role in violent male behavior, and, although health and heredity sometimes go hand in hand, childhood adversity and severe bullying in adolescence can affect even physical well-being in midlife.

©2020 Dreamscape Media, LLC (P)2020 Dreamscape Media, LLC

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How to Make An Interesting Subject Boring!

I love learning what makes people tick and I had high hopes for this audiobook. However as a work of science communication it was seriously lacking. I have a science background myself and am familiar with various facets of experiement research but found myself struggling to get through this book. It was long and laborious and riddled with repetitive cliches such "heading forth on our biogenomics adventure" and in one particular chapter the overuse of acronyms was hugely off-putting.
To be fair it was a difficult ask to condense landmark studies such as the world remowned Dunedin study into a concise audiobook and some chapters were more interesting than others. The chapters on temperment in childhood and prediction of success later in life and the effect of daycare on later adult development was particularly interesting. However overall I was disappointed in the book as it often got bogged down with the minutae of scientific study and experimental design while forgetting the bigger picture. Some case examples of real people may have helped bridge the gap between scientific study and the real lives of people. Personally i much rather prefer Robert Sapolsky's Behave as a more digestible version of relating as to why humans behave as they do.

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