


Books in series

Economics
The User's Guide
2014

Human Evolution
A Pelican Introduction
2014

Revolutionary Russia, 1891-1991
A History
2014

Greek and Roman Political Ideas
A Pelican Introduction
2014

Who Governs Britain?
2015

How to See the World
An Introduction to Images, from Self-Portraits to Selfies, Maps to Movies, and More
2015

The Meaning of Science
An Introduction to the Philosophy of Science
2015

A Pelican Introduction
2015

The European Union
A Citizen's Guide
2016

Islam
The Essentials
2017

A Pelican Introduction
2017

Think Like an Anthropologist
2017

Hermeneutics
Facts and Interpretation in the Age of Information
2018

Being Ecological
2018

Object-Oriented Ontology
A New Theory of Everything
2018

Marx and Marxism
2018

The Human Planet
How We Created the Anthropocene
2018

Think Again
How to Reason and Argue
2018

Parenting the First Twelve Years
What the Evidence Tells Us
2018

Social Mobility and Its Enemies
2018

National Populism
The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy
2018

What We Really Do All Day
Insights from the Centre for Time Use Research
2019

A Short History of Brexit
2019

A Political History of the World
Three Thousand Years of War and Peace
2018

Our Universe
An Astronomer's Guide
2019

Chinese Thought
From Confucius to Cook Ding
2019

The Art of Statistics
How to Learn from Data
2019

This Is Shakespeare
2019

The Government of No One
The Theory and Practice of Anarchism
2019

Plunder of the Commons
A Manifesto for Sharing Public Wealth
2019

Artificial Intelligence
A Guide for Thinking Humans
2019

Can We Be Happier?
Evidence and Ethics
2020

Feeding Britain
Our Food Problems and How to Fix Them
2020

The Road to Conscious Machines
The Story of AI
2020

Feminisms
A Global History
2020

Architecture
From Prehistory to Climate Emergency
2021

Around the World in 80 Books
2021

How Religion Evolved
And Why It Endures
2022

The Blue Commons
Rescuing the Economy of the Sea
2022
Authors

Robin Ian MacDonald Dunbar FBA FRAI is a British anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist and a specialist in primate behaviour. Dunbar's academic and research career includes the University of Bristol, University of Cambridge from 1977 until 1982, and University College London from 1987 until 1994. In 1994, Dunbar became Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at University of Liverpool, but he left Liverpool in 2007 to take up the post of Director of the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Oxford.


Tariq Ramadan is the son of Said Ramadan and Wafa Al-Bana, who was the eldest daughter of Hassan al Banna, who in 1928 founded the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Gamal al-Banna, the liberal Muslim reformer is his great-uncle. His father was a prominent figure in the Muslim Brotherhood and was exiled by Gamal Abdul Nasser[3] from Egypt to Switzerland, where Tariq was born. Tariq Ramadan studied Philosophy and French literature at the Masters level and holds a PhD in Arabic and Islamic studies from the University of Geneva. He also wrote a PhD dissertation on Friedrich Nietzsche, entitled Nietzsche as a Historian of Philosophy.[4] Ramadan then studied Islamic jurisprudence at Al-Azhar university in Cairo, Egypt.[5] He taught at the College de Saussure, a high school in Geneva, Switzerland, and held a lectureship in Religion and Philosophy at the University of Fribourg from 1996 to 2003. In October 2005 he began teaching at St Antony's College at the University of Oxford on a Visiting Fellowship. In 2005 he was a senior research fellow at the Lokahi Foundation.[6][7] In 2007 he successfully applied for the professorship in Islamic studies at the University of Leiden, but then declined to take up the position, citing professional reasons.[8][9] He was also a guest professor of Identity and Citizenship at Erasmus University Rotterdam,[10][11][12] till August 2009 when the City of Rotterdam and Erasmus University dismissed him from his positions as "integration adviser" and professor, stating that the program he chairs on Iran's Press TV, Islam & Life, was "irreconcilable" with his duties in Rotterdam. Ramadan described this move as Islamophobic and politically charged. Beginning September 2009, Ramadan, was appointed to the His Highness Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani Chair in Contemporary Islamic Studies at Oxford University. Ramadan established the Mouvement des Musulmans Suisses (Movement of Swiss Muslims),which engages in various interfaith seminars. He is an advisor to the EU on religious issues and was sought for advice by the EU on a commission on “Islam and Secularism”.In September 2005 he was invited to join a task force by the government of the United Kingdom.[3] He is also the President of the Euro-Muslim Network,a Brussels-based think-tank. He is widely interviewed and has produced about 100 tapes which sell tens of thousands of copies each year As of 2009, Tariq Ramadan was persona non grata in Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia[19] Libya or Syria because of his "criticism of these undemocratic regimes that deny the most basic human rights". Ramadan is married to a French convert to Islam and they have four children.
Melanie Mitchell is a professor of computer science at Portland State University. She has worked at the Santa Fe Institute and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Her major work has been in the areas of analogical reasoning, complex systems, genetic algorithms and cellular automata, and her publications in those fields are frequently cited. She received her PhD in 1990 from the University of Michigan under Douglas Hofstadter and John Holland, for which she developed the Copycat cognitive architecture. She is the author of "Analogy-Making as Perception", essentially a book about Copycat. She has also critiqued Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science and showed that genetic algorithms could find better solutions to the majority problem for one-dimensional cellular automata. She is the author of An Introduction to Genetic Algorithms, a widely known introductory book published by MIT Press in 1996. She is also author of Complexity: A Guided Tour (Oxford University Press, 2009), which won the 2010 Phi Beta Kappa Science Book Award.







Peter Richard Grenville Layard, Baron Layard FBA, is a British labour economist, currently working as programme director of the Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics. His early career focused on how to reduce unemployment and inequality. He was Senior Research Officer for the famous Robbins Committee on Higher Education. This committee's report led to the massive expansion of UK university education in the 1960s and 1970s. Following research on happiness begun in the 1970s by economists such as Richard Easterlin at the University of Southern California, he has written about the economics of happiness, with one theme being the importance of non-income variables on aggregate happiness, including mental health. His main current interest is how better mental health could improve our social and economic life. His work on mental health, including publishing The Depression Report in 2006, led to the establishment of the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme in England. He is co-editor of the World Happiness Report, with John F. Helliwell and Jeffrey Sachs.


Guy Standing is a British professor of Development Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, and co-founder of the Basic Income Earth Network (BIEN). Standing has written widely in the areas of labour economics, labour market policy, unemployment, labour market flexibility, structural adjustment policies and social protection. His recent work has concerned the emerging precariat class and the need to move towards unconditional basic income and deliberative democracy.

Joanna Dunkley OBE is a British astrophysicist and Professor of Physics at Princeton University. She works on the origin of the Universe and the Cosmic microwave background (CMB) using the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, the Simons Observatory and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST). Her first book, Our Universe: An Astronomer's Guide was published in 2019. Source: wikipedia