Your basket is currently empty
**SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as possible! Buy with confidence! 
Mark to edges EXCELLENT value for money and ready for dispatch. Delivery usually within 3/5 days. Our reputation is built on our Speedy Delivery Service and our Customer Service Team. 
Our aim is to create value for our customers through the provision of low cost, affordable products and an overall satisfying buying experience. 
Paperback, ex-library, with usual stamps and markings, in fair all round condition suitable as a reading copy. Ships within 24 hours. pp., 800grams, ISBN: 0670850187. 
Light spine crease. Edge wear. Pages yellowing. B&W illustrations. 308pp inc index. 
Ships from the UK. Former Library book. Shows definite wear, and perhaps considerable marking on inside. Your purchase also supports literacy charities. 
Book in good or better condition. Dispatched same day from warehouse. Please email with any questions for quick response. 
Book in good or better condition. Dispatched same day from warehouse. Please email with any questions for quick response. 
Book in good or better condition. Dispatched same day from warehouse. Please email with any questions for quick response. 
(320 pages) how could such an intricate object as the human eye-so complex and so precise-have come about by chance? this title builds a carefully reasoned argument for evolutionary adaptation as the force behind the various life forms on earth. illustrations (Paperback) 
0393316823 NEW/UNREAD! ! ! Text is Clean and Unmarked! --Be Sure to Compare Seller Feedback and Ratings before Purchasing--Has a small black ink mark on outside edge of pages. May have light shelf wear to cover from storage, if any. 
'Richard Dawkins, one of the most brilliant of the rising generation of biologists, gently and expertly debunks some of the favoourite illusions of social biology about the evolution of altruism, but this is on no account to be though of as a debunking sort of book: it is, on the contrary, a most skilful reformulation of the central problems of social biology in terms of the genetical theory of natural selection. Beyond this, it is learned, witty, and very well written....exhilaratingly good. ' (Spectator). Illustrated. 308 pp. 