DescriptionABOUT THE BOOKIn a 2006 interview with Meet the Author, the year when The Selfish Gene celebrated its 30th anniversary, Richard Dawkins had this to say:"...If I had to write it again, I wouldn't write it very differently. It has been described as a revolutionary book, in one respect it is. But it's only a revolutionary way in looking at orthodox Darwinian natural selection. It helps to look at it in this revolutionary way. It could equally well have been called "the Altruistic Animal," because if you have selfish genes, which only means that natural selection works at the level of the gene; if you have selfish genes, then you may have altruistic individuals. And that's what the book is about."What Dawkins describes as "revolutionary," others have construed as controversial. When The Selfish Gene was first published in 1976, it created a number of waves within the study evolutionary biology, largely dominated by Darwinian doctrine. (One could say it made a splash in the gene pool.) If Darwin's idea of natural selection was based on the concept of "survival of the fittest," then why does altruism exist between individuals? Why aren't all living things selfish in a cut-throat battle for survival? Dawkins strove to explain altruism in The Selfish Gene, with the argument that altruistic behavior can be explained through the selfishness of our genes.