
Planta Sapiens
Unmasking Plant Intelligence
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Narrated by:
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John Sackville
About this listen
What is it like to be a plant?
It's not a question we might think to contemplate, even though many of us live surrounded by plants. Science has long explored the wonderful ways in which plants communicate, behave and shape their environments: from chemical warfare to turning their predators to cannibalism. But they're usually just the backdrop to our frenetic animal lives.
While plants may not have brains or move around as we do, cutting-edge science is revealing that they have astonishing inner worlds of an alternate kind to ours. They can plan ahead, learn, recognise their relatives, assess risks and make decisions. They can even be put to sleep. Innovative new tools might allow us to actually see them do these things - from electrophysiological recordings to MRI and PET scans. If you can look in the right way, a world full of drama unfurls.
In PLANTA SAPIENS, Professor Paco Calvo offers a bold new perspective on plant biology and cognitive science. Using the latest scientific findings, Calvo challenges us to make an imaginative leap into a world that is so close and yet so alien - one that will expand our understanding of our own minds.
From their rich subjective experiences to how they are inspiring novel ways of approaching the ecological crisis, PLANTA SAPIENS is a dazzling exploration of the lives of plants and a call to approach how we think about the natural world in a new, maverick way.
©2022 Paco Calvo and Natalie Lawrence (P)2022 Hachette Audio UKListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
'A joy to read ... mind-expanding' Book of the Week, Guardian
'A bold and brave paean to our planet's ligneous, leafy kingdom' Telegraph
'An impressive exploration and dazzling insight into the lives of plants' Reaction Book Digest
What listeners say about Planta Sapiens
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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- Anonymous User
- 02-22-23
Could not finish
I find the topic interesting. but the book is more about himself than about plants. The narration might not help either.
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