Dirty Tricks Nature's Code of Deception

£9.99

Lies aren’t the exception in life,they’re the rule, nature runs on deception. Animals fake, plants trick, and humans spin comforting stories we call “truth.”. This book reveals how survival, love, power, and even knowledge itself are built on fictions we mistake for truth. This book uncovers the hidden code of deception that drives evolution, society, and even our own minds.

This book is structured like .... a detective’s manual. Each part unveils a new layer of deception:

- One-sense lies like stick insects fooling the eye.

- Full-spectrum lies like the Orchid seducing bees with sight, scent, and touch.

- Self-deception, where organisms—even humans—believe their own falsehoods to better trick others.

- And finally, nature’s lie detector, where biology offers tools to see through illusions.

What makes this book unique is the constant crossfire between biology and human society. Espionage, politics, branding, even office life—everywhere you look, the tricks of nature are mirrored in our own behaviour. Spies forge documents just as snakes mimic venomous cousins. Politicians orchestrate multi-channel deceptions—sights, sounds, and staged behaviours—like orchids staging a full sensory performance for duped pollinators.

It is a blend of science, storytelling, and social critique. Read it if you want to see through the greatest illusion of all - that life is honest and perfect.

Lies aren’t the exception in life,they’re the rule, nature runs on deception. Animals fake, plants trick, and humans spin comforting stories we call “truth.”. This book reveals how survival, love, power, and even knowledge itself are built on fictions we mistake for truth. This book uncovers the hidden code of deception that drives evolution, society, and even our own minds.

This book is structured like .... a detective’s manual. Each part unveils a new layer of deception:

- One-sense lies like stick insects fooling the eye.

- Full-spectrum lies like the Orchid seducing bees with sight, scent, and touch.

- Self-deception, where organisms—even humans—believe their own falsehoods to better trick others.

- And finally, nature’s lie detector, where biology offers tools to see through illusions.

What makes this book unique is the constant crossfire between biology and human society. Espionage, politics, branding, even office life—everywhere you look, the tricks of nature are mirrored in our own behaviour. Spies forge documents just as snakes mimic venomous cousins. Politicians orchestrate multi-channel deceptions—sights, sounds, and staged behaviours—like orchids staging a full sensory performance for duped pollinators.

It is a blend of science, storytelling, and social critique. Read it if you want to see through the greatest illusion of all - that life is honest and perfect.