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Could you put yourself inside the mind of a trilobite? Oren Harman has...

Angela Kiverstein looks at the new book by Oren Harman, the professor who marries myth and science

November 15, 2018 16:18
'Jealousy' by Israeli artist Ofra Kobliner

ByAngela Kiverstein, Angela Kiverstein

3 min read

You cannot truly understand jealousy unless you put yourself inside the mind of a trilobite, the first creature on earth to develop an eye. But it’s OK. Oren Harman, professor of the history of science at Bar Ilan University, has done it for us, in Evolutions, Fifteen Myths That Explain Our World, published this week by Head of Zeus.

It is written in a lyrical style. “The idea was to write science in a different register and by doing so explore more deeply the relationship between science and myth,” he says.

For instance, when the trilobite achieves sight and falls in love, its emotional descriptions are epic “Perhaps this is how Hades felt when he looked upon Persephone in the Sicilian meadow, spellbound by the violets. Perhaps he, too, could not help it, needing to have her to himself, exclusively. But he was a god, and while I dwelled in the ocean’s underworld, I was just an arthropod.” Poor trilobite.

Other myths in Evolutions tackle themes such as motherhood, hubris, solitude, sacrifice, immortality, death and hope. “Science doesn’t touch these questions for instance, what is love,” asks Harman. “Science says it is oxytocin rushing through our veins but that doesn’t capture it for us entirely. We’re left wanting. There is great hope in science we can synthesise drugs to treat disease; build telescopes… We should celebrate that, but it won’t necessarily lead to happiness.