Richard Dawkins FRS

FRSL, Emeritus Fellow

New College, Oxford, United  Kingdom

Profile – Richard Dawkins (b. 1941)

Born in Nairobi, Dawkins came to England with his family in 1949. He studied at the University of Oxford, where he subsequently became Lecturer in Zoology, Fellow of New College, and then Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science until his retirement in 2008. His first book, The Selfish Gene (1976), established what came to be called ‘selfish gene theory’, and was a bestseller for many decades. As a protagonist in the ‘Darwin Wars’, he battled against Stephen Jay Gould over the importance of natural selection and adaptation in evolution (Brown, 1999; Sterelny, 2001). His book The God Delusion (2007) inspired ‘the new atheism’, a movement against religious dogma and indoctrination whose main proponents, including Dawkins, were dubbed ‘The four horsemen’. He describes human beings as mere ‘survival machines’ – the ‘lumbering robots’ designed to carry our genes around. In promoting ‘Universal Darwinism’ he invented the concept of the meme as a cultural replicator, and refers to religions as viruses of the mind. As for consciousness, he thinks it is ‘the most profound mystery facing modern biology’.

More biographical information

Richard Dawkins Foundation for Science and Reason

Articles about Richard Dawkins

Constructing life. The Observer, September 2015

Is Richard Dawkins destroying his reputation? The Guardian, June 2015

Wikipedia

Facebook

Twitter @RichardDawkins

Twitter @rdfrs (Richard Dawkins Foundation)

Publications

Bibliography on Wikipedia

Quotes on Goodreads

Selected publications relevant to consciousness

Dawkins, R. (1976). The selfish gene. Oxford: Oxford University Press. (New edition with additional material, 1989.) Google Books preview of 1989 edition here.

Dawkins, R. (1986). The blind watchmaker: Why the evidence of evolution reveals a universe without design. London: Longman. Google Books preview here.

Dawkins, R. (1989). The extended phenotype: The long reach of the gene. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Google Books preview of revised 1999 edition (with afterword by Daniel Dennett) here.

Video

Memes and Religion as a computer virus. Extracts from Q&A, The Oxford Union, February 2014

Richard interviews Deepak Chopra, May 2013

Memes podcast with Richard Dawkins, Robert Wright, and Susan Blackmore, December 2011

The riddle of consciousness. Brief comment for Big Think, October 2009