Where to Start with Daniel Lieberman: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Daniel Lieberman — how to approach The Story of the Human Body, his account of evolutionary mismatch and the root causes of modern chronic disease. A complete reading guide.
By Elena Marsh
Daniel Lieberman is a paleoanthropologist and evolutionary biologist at Harvard University, where he directs the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology. He is best known in the scientific community for his research on the evolution of human running — specifically, the hypothesis that humans evolved as persistence hunters, running prey to exhaustion over long distances. The Story of the Human Body: Evolution, Health, and Disease (2013) translates his research and that of his field into a comprehensive popular account of what human evolution reveals about human health.
Where to Start: The Story of the Human Body (2013)
The essential Daniel Lieberman — and one of the most intellectually productive frameworks for thinking about human health in recent popular science. The Story of the Human Body begins with a premise that sounds obvious once stated but transforms how you think about nearly every aspect of modern health: the human body was not designed for the modern world. It was shaped by six million years of natural selection in environments radically different from the ones we now inhabit, and many of the health problems afflicting modern populations are the predictable consequences of that mismatch.
The book’s first half is natural history: Lieberman traces human evolution from the divergence of the hominin lineage roughly six million years ago through the appearance of Homo sapiens, the development of language and culture, and the agricultural revolution. Each chapter examines not only what changed but why the changes were beneficial in their original context and what tradeoffs they introduced.
Bipedalism freed the hands for tool use and enabled efficient long-distance travel — but redistributed mechanical stress to the lower back and knees in ways that make back pain and osteoarthritis nearly universal in older populations. The enlarged brain enabled cognition, language, and culture — but required narrowing the birth canal relative to skull size, making human childbirth uniquely dangerous among primates. Agriculture produced reliable food surpluses — but also dietary monotony, vitamin deficiencies, tooth decay, and the population density that enabled infectious disease pandemics. Each adaptation was a bargain, and we live with the fine print.
The book’s second half delivers its central argument: the concept of evolutionary mismatch. Many of the health conditions that characterise modern populations — type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity, back pain, myopia, osteoporosis, certain cancers — are not random or inevitable but are the predictable results of deploying biological systems in environments that differ fundamentally from those that shaped them. We evolved to crave sugar and fat because calorie-dense food was scarce; in an environment of abundant ultra-processed food, that craving becomes a driver of metabolic disease. We evolved to walk and run over varied terrain; in an environment of chairs and cars, our cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems pay the price of disuse. We evolved to spend significant time outdoors in varied light; evidence suggests that children’s eyes develop myopia partly as a consequence of insufficient outdoor exposure.
Lieberman’s most provocative concept is what he calls dysevolution: the self-perpetuating cycle in which modern medicine treats the symptoms of evolutionary mismatch rather than addressing the root causes. We develop surgical interventions for back pain produced by sedentary behaviour. We prescribe glasses for myopia that result from children spending too little time outdoors. We manufacture insulin for diabetes driven by ultra-processed food. Each individual intervention is reasonable; collectively, they perpetuate the environmental conditions that produce the conditions requiring treatment.
The book is careful to distinguish between what the evidence supports and what is speculative, and Lieberman is consistently critical of both the romantic naturalism that idealises pre-agricultural life and the technological optimism that assumes medicine can simply fix whatever mismatches arise.
Reading Daniel Lieberman
The Story of the Human Body is Lieberman’s essential popular work. It stands alone and requires no prior reading.
For the full Daniel Lieberman bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Daniel Lieberman author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Daniel Lieberman?
The Story of the Human Body: Evolution, Health, and Disease (2013) is Lieberman's essential popular work — a rigorous and narrative account of six million years of human evolution that explains how the bodies we inhabit were shaped for a world that no longer exists. The evolutionary mismatch framework is the book's central contribution: a lens that makes sense of obesity, back pain, myopia, and dozens of other modern ailments in a single coherent argument.
What is The Story of the Human Body about?
The Story of the Human Body traces human evolutionary history from our divergence from chimpanzees through bipedalism, brain expansion, language, and agriculture, examining each transition not just as progress but as tradeoffs with biological consequences. The central argument is that many chronic conditions affecting modern humans are evolutionary mismatches — predictable results of deploying stone-age bodies in a modern environment — rather than inevitable consequences of aging or random afflictions.
Is The Story of the Human Body scientifically up to date?
The Story of the Human Body was published in 2013 and some specific dietary and exercise recommendations have been refined or debated since then. The evolutionary framework — the core intellectual contribution — remains robust and influential. Lieberman is a working researcher at Harvard whose fieldwork credentials give the book unusual depth. Readers should treat some specific prescriptions as of 2013 rather than as settled current consensus, while the evolutionary mismatch concept itself has only grown more supported.
What should I read after The Story of the Human Body?
After The Story of the Human Body, Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens covers human history from a similar evolutionary starting point with more focus on culture and institutions. Chris van Tulleken's Ultra-Processed People applies evolutionary thinking to the modern food environment specifically. Peter Attia's Outlive covers longevity science with the same preventive medicine orientation but more clinical depth on what to do with the evolutionary insight.
