






Buy Humankind: A Hopeful History – from the presenter of the 2025 BBC ‘Moral Revolution’ Reith lectures 1 by Bregman, Rutger (ISBN: 9781408898956) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: An excellent exploration of our inherent kindness - A review of the data & evidence that humanity is kinder then we usually give ourselves credit for. Detailed & thorough but still engaging & inspiring - a great read! Review: Great book, much needed - Lovely book, which gives you hope for humanity in general. It’s not fluffy rainbow and flowers stuff, his arguments for the basic goodness of humanity is all based on genuine research over many years. He also points out flaws in some well known studies that suggest people are basically cruel or indifferent to others. I am recommending it to everyone I know!










| Best Sellers Rank | 726 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 1 in Educational Strategies & Policies 3 in Business & Economic History 13 in Philosophy (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (8,331) |
| Dimensions | 12.8 x 3 x 20.8 cm |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 1408898950 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1408898956 |
| Item weight | 394 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 496 pages |
| Publication date | 13 May 2021 |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
R**Y
An excellent exploration of our inherent kindness
A review of the data & evidence that humanity is kinder then we usually give ourselves credit for. Detailed & thorough but still engaging & inspiring - a great read!
M**N
Great book, much needed
Lovely book, which gives you hope for humanity in general. It’s not fluffy rainbow and flowers stuff, his arguments for the basic goodness of humanity is all based on genuine research over many years. He also points out flaws in some well known studies that suggest people are basically cruel or indifferent to others. I am recommending it to everyone I know!
R**E
Humankind A Hopeful History
Quite interesting read thought provoking
L**D
An Antidote for Today's Gloomy Polarised World!
A welcome change to read something full of positivity and hope. It's a welcome tonic, a mental serotonin boost in these troubled times globally, and increasingly, regionally and nationally. They say that 'every day's a school day's. Here, almost every page sheds new light on on a facetime of human life. Here's a book where the title does complete justice to the contents within.
J**N
Uplifting and Insightful - Even though I'm still not completely convinced!
I ordered this book after wanting to read a somewhat positive spin on human nature given our almost constant exposure to the barrage of stories about how mankind is nothing but evil and we are all just animals waiting for societal breakdown before we can unleash our worst natures on the world. Happily, this book provides very good evidence that, at the very least, the information we receive might not be the full story. I'm not fully convinced, having read several other tomes on human behavior and definitely seeing some 'real life' evidence of human wickedness, but still, this book supplies plentiful evidence that humankind is not all-wicked, and in fact might even be able to achieve great things were it not for our seeming willingness to willfully forget about our nature and our past and believe only the worst about ourselves and our societies. There are not many books where you read them and HOPE that what they are espousing is the truth because it will help you to feel more optimistic during the rather dark times we seem to currently be living through but this is definitely one of those books. I came away from it with a newfound respect for mankind and a genuine bit of inspiration to help make the world a little bit better, even if only in my local community. (I feel community is the missing ingredient in society today that has allowed use to stray so far from our warmer 'communal' natures). I had to look up lots of things outside of the book to confirm whether or not the author was bending the truth a little and for the most part I was pleasantly surprised. In short, it really does seem that humans are not as bad as we have all been led to believe.
S**I
Excellent read
Excellent read, informative with many examples and stories reflecting the chapters. Highly recommend!
R**T
Good writing
Grat content but page margins of paperback could be wider.
S**S
Everyone should read this - and it is fun to do so
Rutger writes in an engaging style and gives factual arguments to smash our long held ideas of cynicism about other people. His central arguments are strong and full of powerful anecdotes to enhance any conversation you may have about his ideas. To be critical he is guilty of the same journalistic selective presentation of facts to make his case at times that he castigates others for. A particular howler is using Christian doctrine of ‘depravity’ to misrepresent the Christian view of human kind as wholly bad. Any reading of the bible shows both good and bad parts of human nature and the son of a pastor must know enough of the doctrine in question to know that it is only in relation to perfect God that man can never reach an acceptable standard. Again he glosses over apparent problems with behaviourist theory without pointing out that it is the misunderstanding of real motivations - rewards that is the problem rather than the theory. That said , if I could have bought everyone in my family a hardback copy of this book which I read on Kindle for Christmas then I would have done!
C**D
It's great to read something that genuinely creates cognitive dissonance to what we keep being fed by the echo chambers of mass and social media: that human beings are fundamentally good. It is a well researched, and well written work, that makes a case for the Rousseauian vision of humanity to that of Thomas Hobbes, and it does it well. It certainly caused me to stop and re-think my cynicism at times, although some of the concepts may be a hard sell to those of us who have been inundated with the individualism and self-aggrandizement of growing up in a capitalist society. Still, whether you are already left leaning, a centrist 'realist', or on the right side of everything, give this book a chance. There are some very compelling arguments presented, backed by even more compelling facts.
P**S
A well written and engaging book that goes a long way to restoring one's faith in humanity. And an amazing insight into how much our society is virtually purpose-built to undermine that faith I was surprised by how much I've believed (based on research) for quite some time that has since been proven as plain wrong and even contrived e.g. the Stamford Prison Experiment, the Bystander Effect and so on. I listened to the Audible version that was very well narrated and that added a lot to the experience.
M**D
Remarquable analyse, pour une fois positive, de l'histoire de l'humanité. Revigorant. Bien écrit et même souvent de l'humour.
J**.
I was becoming very negative and Ben depressed. Reading the news and social media had squelched my love for humanity. My wife told me I needed to find something else to read, so I went online and searched for something to help me renew my faith in people again. I saw this book mentioned a few times and gave it a shot. My goodness. This book. If you’re going through what I was, give this book a read. I believe it will help you too. Thank you, Rutger Bregman. I really needed this.
J**I
An evidence based case for humanity's positive qualities. Makes a compelling case for optimism over humankinds future.
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