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Desmond Morris has died

bbc.com

124 points by martey 18 days ago · 24 comments

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ajb 13 days ago

RIP. He's better known for his works about people and sex, but I know him from his book "Catwatching", which is a very thoughtful observational study of cats.

  • strangegecko 12 days ago

    My family had cats when I was young and I walked the neighbor's dog too. I fondly remember reading the translated versions of Catwatching and Dogwatching in the early 90s.

dkarl 13 days ago

Little tidbit that isn't mentioned in the article: he was a consultant on the film Quest for Fire and developed movement patterns and gestures for the actors.

Invictus0 13 days ago

The infamous orgasm episode (NSFW): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2RkhQsGCXco

cf100clunk 17 days ago

His anthropological views raised more questions than answers, challenging us to ponder just how far modern humankind had progressed from our days of living in caves and hovels, dressed rudimentally in animal hair. His conclusions could be arbitrary, but nevertheless provocative.

  • Angostura 13 days ago

    Yes. I wasn’t always convinced he was consistently right, but he was consistently interesting

etiam 13 days ago

I'm grateful to him for many great reads.

Morris' autobiography "Animal Days" (1979) is a very charming account of his early life and career, in case someone wishes to take this occasion to read more about that than appears in the obituary.

hermitcrab 13 days ago

On of Swindon's more illustrious sons.

  • jbaber 12 days ago

    I grew up being told the two biggest names were Morris and Diana Dors.

    I have to agree with other threads that I don't believe most of his conjectures, but they're great for stimulating thought.

Pet_Ant 13 days ago

“The Naked Ape” is seminal work. When I found it in the bargain bin of used bookstore I was incensed!

golemotron 13 days ago

I'll never forget his theory about the origin of the heart symbol.

ultratalk 13 days ago

Is this the same guy who wrote Peoplewatching (Manwatching, I believe, is what it was called earlier)?

thoughtsimple 13 days ago

Changed my life. Even if his theories were wrong, it was eye opening

hermitcrab 13 days ago

"Morris had spent his national service lecturing soldiers in fine arts"

Imagine trying to explain impressionism to some conscript squaddies.

  • worik 13 days ago

    Why would conscrtpt squaddies have any more trouble with that, than you? Or me?

    People everywhere are very smart, curious and want to something other than kill.

    There are exceptions, but they're exceptions

    • ajb 12 days ago

      Indeed. Conscript squaddies were representative of the population, that's how conscription worked. Except for being all men, of course. It's no more silly to expect them to be interested in art, than to expect schoolchildren to be.

  • golem14 13 days ago

    Hey, I was one of those -- get off my lawn!

    ;)

analog8374 13 days ago

The Naked Ape

so fine!

ultratalk 13 days ago

Is this the same guy who wrote Peoplewatching?

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