British scientist Richard Dawkins gained fame around the world for his best-selling books and his challenging ideas. He won many awards and prizes for his work.
Richard Dawkins originally studied zoology, and his main area of interest was evolution. His ideas and suggestions about the way the world, and life on Earth, came about were discussed widely in books and newspapers and on television and radio. They were very controversial.
Dawkins was born in Nairobi, Kenya, the son of a British soldier. His family moved to England when he was eight. Dawkins began his studies at Oxford University in 1959. After receiving a degree there he taught zoology at the University of California at Berkeley in the United States for two years. He then returned to Oxford. He published his first book, The Selfish Gene, in 1976.
The Selfish Gene was a book about evolution—how humans and other living things came to be on Earth. It built on the ideas of Charles Darwin and other scientists who thought about how living things change over time to survive in their environment. After this, Dawkins wrote many more books that explored the ways in which evolution may happen. He was especially known for trying to explain science in simple terms that many people could understand. In 1995 he was made the Charles Simonyi professor of public understanding of science at Oxford University.
Richard Dawkins was outspoken about his atheism, which means he did not believe in God. In 2006 his book, The God Delusion, was published. It challenged people’s faiths and sparked a great deal of interest and discussion about religion.