Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond

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    • ISBN: 0393317552
    • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
    • Pub. Date: April 1999
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    Synopsis

    Winner of the Pulitzer Prize.

    Annotation

    In this "artful, informative, and delightful (book)" ("New York Review of Books"), Jared Diamond offers a convincing explanation of the way the modern world came to be and stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human history.

    The New York Times Book Review, 1997 - James Shreeve

    An ambitious, highly important book.

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    Biography

    Jared Diamond is professor of geography at UCLA and author of the best-selling Collapse and The Third Chimpanzee. He is a MacArthur Fellow and was awarded the National Medal of Science.

    Customer Reviews

    A fascinating account of early historyby willyvan

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    08/17/2009: This is a remarkable and thought-provoking book, full of insights into our past.

    At the end of the last ice age, in 11,000 BC, all peoples on all the continents were hunter-gatherers. Why the great subsequent differences? Biology? Different genetic endowments? No, it is not a matter of racial differences - there is only one human race, as Diamond shows.

    Why did bronze tools appear early in parts of Eurasia, but late and only locally in the New World, and never in aboriginal Australia? Diamond answers that environmental geography lays down the conditions of economic and social development.

    Eurasia is the world's largest and most diverse landmass. Diamond shows how its larger stock of domestic plants and animals gave it the lead, starting in southwest Asia's Fertile Crescent. Big-seeded annual cereals, like wheats (emmer and einkorn) and barley, were easy to domesticate, and Eurasia's wheats have a higher protein content than East Asia's rice or the New World's corn.

    Eurasia also had the largest number of wild mammalian species, 72 candidates for domestication. There were 14 ancient species of big herbivorous domestic animals: 13 were confined to Eurasia, one to South America. There were none in North America, Australia or sub-Saharan Africa. Eurasia had the unique combination of domesticable animals - sheep, goats, cows, pigs and dogs. Also, Eurasia's east-west axis enabled a swifter spread of crops and livestock across its 10,000-mile band of temperate latitudes.

    The ultimate cause of progress - food production - led to the proximate causes - germs, literacy, technology and centralised government. Guns, germs and steel are power factors.

    But Diamond underestimates how empires seized their given advantages to attack, conquer and exploit other less fortunate peoples. And he tends to justify the current inequitable world order, as when he writes of, "revolts . promising less oppression . all the misery still being caused by such struggles in the modern world."

    I Also Recommend: Seahenge: A Quest for Life and Death in Bronze Age Britain, Britain B C, Britain in the Middle Ages: An Archaeological History, Flag Fen: Life and Death of Prehistoric Landscape.

    Greatby Anonymous

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    07/25/2009: I really enjoyed Jared Diamond presentation of his theory on why different classes exist. The book is very organized and one can see where he is going with every example he provides to prove his theory. At times the books seems repetitive but that only adds to his strengthening of his ideas.


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