The Ancestor’s Tale

Richard Dawkins’ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Dawkins and http://www.richarddawkins.net/) 2004 popular science book, The Ancestor’s Tale, is loosely modelled on Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Instead of pilgrims journeying to Canterbury, Dawkins’ protagonists are living species, journeying back through evolutionary time.

In real time, individual species diverged and speciated. But in the backwards time of The Ancestor’s Tale, separate species start the journey apart, in the present, and ‘converge’ together as they descend into the past. Humans ‘meet’ the chimpanzee and the bonobo around 6 million years ago. We all continue back in time together, rendezvousing with gorillas another million years earlier.

The time doubles before the next convergence, with orangutans, at 14 million years ago. Dawkins takes his readers back and back and back. We eventually meet rodents and rabbits at 75 million years, amphibians at 340 million years, lungfish at 417 million years.

Insects, spiders, worms, snails and other protostomes are all more closely related to one another than to us, so on their own journey they have already converged. We meet them as one huge scuttling, crawling, sliding band at around 590 million years ago. The common ancestor – the “concestor” in backwards time – which we share with the protostomes, was probably worm-like, segmented, with a mouth at the front, and probably had eyes.

The Dawkins reversal of time is designed to exorcise the ‘conceit of hindsight’, in which all of evolution is seen as something inevitably progressing towards the human and in which we lazily describe one species as ‘more evolved’ than any another. The Ancestor’s Tale is a fascinating overview of all life on earth. Dawkins illustrates the tree of life by symbolically walking the journey back to its origin.

626 pages in Phoenix paperback edition

ISBN 978-0753819968

Richard Dawkins

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