EconTalk   /     Bird Brains, Bird Sex, and All Kinds of Beauty (with Matt Ridley)

Summary

Bright colors, long tails, and dances of seduction: they may hurt a bird's chances of survival in the wild, but they seem to increase the chances of reproduction. Is this all part of natural selection or is sexual selection its own force in the bird world? Is there such a thing as beauty for beauty's sake? What can we learn from birds about the human experience of beauty? Listen as author and naturalist Matt Ridley speaks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about a puzzle that kept Darwin up at night and that still troubles modern evolutionary biologists.

Subtitle
Bright colors, long tails, and dances of seduction: they may hurt a bird's chances of survival in the wild, but they seem to increase the chances of reproduction. Is this all part of natural selection or is sexual selection its own force in the bird w
Duration
01:16:45
Publishing date
2025-03-24 10:30
Link
https://www.econtalk.org/bird-brains-bird-sex-and-all-kinds-of-beauty-with-matt-ridley/
Contributors
  EconTalk: Russ Roberts
author  
Enclosures
https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/6fdba516-8381-43b0-b29f-59d05512b693/episodes/6ae3a316-a59e-421f-87cc-725aaf0ba825/audio/9a82113a-9c2a-41f4-b8bf-5490f5a979d9/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&feed=wgl4xEgL
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Bright colors, long tails, and dances of seduction: they may hurt a bird's chances of survival in the wild, but they seem to increase the chances of reproduction. Is this all part of natural selection or is sexual selection its own force in the bird world? Is there such a thing as beauty for beauty's sake? What can we learn from birds about the human experience of beauty? Listen as author and naturalist Matt Ridley speaks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about a puzzle that kept Darwin up at night and that still troubles modern evolutionary biologists.