A daring and intimate exploration of how genetics
complicates our ideas about blame, punishment, and moral responsibility, from
acclaimed psychologist and author of The Genetic Lottery Kathryn
Paige Harden.
“An extraordinary book, the very best of science writing, because it is
about not just science—it is memoir, history, bleeding-edge genetics, and a
completely original take on original sin.”—Adam Rutherford, author of A
Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived
As one of the world’s leading scientists examining how our DNA shapes
differences in temperament, temptation, and behavior, Kathryn Paige Harden has
seen firsthand how we continue to struggle—in public and in our most private
relationships—with the ancient tensions between nature and nurture, freedom and
constraint, the desire to punish and the longing to forgive.
In Original Sin, she weaves together insights from her own
experience as a daughter, mother, wife, and scientist with cutting-edge
research in genetics and psychology to grapple with some of the most important
questions in modern life: How do we take responsibility for the people we
become, knowing how we are shaped by both biology and experience? How should we
respond when people hurt each other—or themselves? And has science made guilt
obsolete?
Navigating the psychological and biological terrain of addiction, antisocial
behavior, and violence, Harden confronts the disorienting ways science
unsettles our understanding of wrongdoing and choice. In doing so, she asks us
not to absolve but to reckon differently with notions of fairness and blame. A
revelatory inquiry into the uneasy space where human behavior meets inherited
biology, Original Sin challenges us to imagine a more humane
vision of accountability—for ourselves and for one another.
About the Author
Kathryn Paige Harden is a professor in the
department of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin, where she leads
the Developmental Behavior Genetics lab.
Harden received her PhD in clinical psychology from the
University of Virginia and completed her clinical internship at McLean
Hospital/Harvard Medical School.
She has been honored by the American Psychological
Association for her distinguished scientific contributions to the study of
genetics and human individual differences.