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Guns, Germs and Steel [ABRIDGED] [AUDIOBOOK] (Audio CD)
by Jared Diamond
Category:
Non-fiction, Civilization, Human society, History |
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An epic thoroughly researched and well-written and a must read for the innately inquisitive. |
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Author: Jared Diamond
Publisher: Highbridge Audio
Pub. in: August, 2001
ISBN: 1565115147
Pages: 360
Measurements: 4.9 x 5.8 x 1 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BB00052
Other information: Abridged edition; ISBN-13: 978-1565115149
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- Awards & Credential -
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, National Bestseller (in North America), ranked #228 in books on Amazon.com as of November 28, 2006. |
- MSL Picks -
This book is a somewhat linear history of the past 13,000 years across the continents. Diamond seeks to sum up history across various societies on all the continents in a relatively short volume. The impetus for this search starts with a question from a friend of his from New Guinea named Yali. Yali's question was, "Why is it that you white people developed so much cargo and brought it to New Guinea, but we black people had little cargo of our own?"
Reading the book, I think I gulped at this point. This sounds like a classic, loaded question. It sounds disturbingly close to why have we (Europe and its former colonies) succeeded where they have failed. Diamond does not descend into that territory though, but he does not evade criticism for skirting it completely. There are references to a culture's success in industrializing or condensing populations that Diamond brushes off as a mixed blessing, for instance. The advantages of a hunting/gathering culture are not really explored outside of the remarkable sustaining nature of southeast Asia.
This history can probably be described (or perhaps is most successful) as based around environmental causation (as opposed to the racial/ethnic/ social causation that the lump in my throat had been fearing). Descriptions of climate (note: that the history begins with the cessation of the last great ice age), longitudinal or latitudinal axes, elevation and landmass differences play a strong role in determining the fate of humanity. Still, it is interesting to look specifically at the items gathered in the title.
Guns. Europe's refinement of this technology was based on China's innovations with gunpowder. Today's dominant society is a product as much of what it has swallowed and thus incorporated as by what it has innovated. As an interesting counterpoint, Japan had owned more and better guns in c. 1600 CE, than any country in the world. Samurai rulers first limited then outlawed the technology. Japan wouldn't resume manufacture until mid 19th century. Obviously, there is an indisputable importance in the weaponry's influence in shaping the geopolitical world of today.
Germs. Epidemics left people from cultures based on cities with who could resist smallpox and those dense populations more easily replaced those who didn't survive. Smaller groups have a distinct disadvantage versus the interdependent and consequently more interchangable larger cities. Epidemics develop out of these civilizations as germs jump over from domesticated animals (and smaller groups may not even have animals to domesticate). Interesting note: the emperors of the Mayan and Incan civilizations both succumb to disease (likely smallpox) rather than guns.
Steel. Technological advancement is keyed on innovations brought about by dense populations and the possibility for abstraction of responsibilities. A hunter-gatherer culture lacks the abstraction necessary to divide responsibilities to allow for such developments as literacy and mining, as the energies that would fuel these are directed toward survival areas. Diamond makes an interesting and controversial point that the hunter-gatherer culture may be more attuned to intelligence as an evolutionary necessity over civilized society, where the evolutionary energy may be directed at surviving these epidemic illnesses.
There are many aspects of environment that serve as limiting conditions for the development of these things. First, there appears to need to be sustainable farming. Many of the staples of modernity are the crops first domesticated in the fertile crescent region (where today we invade, suck oil, and force the conquered to endure freedom). The western Asian breadbasket provided the means to bank food so that trades could develop. As a complete side note, the Genesis book of the bible can be viewed upon through this filter as it goes into great detail how Joseph set up a system of storing and meting grain in Egypt to greatly increase the population and avoid the calamity of drought and famine brought on by sustenance farming.
Another factor in the civilizing of Eurasia is the landmass itself. Compared to Africa and the Americas, Eurasia is mainly west-east axis versus north-south. Movement of successes in cultivation and domestication could more easily occur because climate differences are easier on a latitudinal basis than on longitudinal. Something like corn (maize) which was domesticated in central Americas took a very long time to make it to North America because of geography. Llamas and guinea pigs (which could be useful for pack animals and food) never made it north. Conversely, all those fertile crescent crops and bigger domesticated animals like cattle, horses, pigs were able to spread from one tip of Asia to the opposite tip of Europe.
To answer Yali's question, some of the answer is luck. Africa, Australia and the Americas may not have been afforded the botanical or zoological advantages that Eurasia had. Some other is environmental determinism, where you are helps make up who you become. For going forward, Diamond cites transportation, communication and information advances as factors that likely will obliviate these historical forces in the future.
After word: Harpers Magazine tackles an issue that was brought up, but not as fully developed here, that of pre-Clovis Native American discoveries (pronouncements), knowingly confronting a loaded racial/ethnocentric question in a folio called "Might White of You: Are American Archaeologists White Supremacists?" The archaeological records supports people living in the Americas since about 9000-11000 BCE. There are scant scraps of evidence prior to that date, but plenty of theories typically more titillating than substantive. One wonders if the pre-Clovis discovery (especially all the business about "caucusoid" skulls), isn't so much about archaeology as setting up an imagined genocide to justify a documented genocide.
(From quoting B. Lapham, USA)
Target readers:
General readers, particularly those interested in History, Anthropology, or Sociology.
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Jared Diamond, professor of physiology at the UCLA School of Medicine, is the author of the best-selling and award-winning The Third Chimpanzee. He has published over 200 articles in Discover, Natural History, Nature, and Geo magazines.
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From the Publisher:
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize. In this "artful, informative, and delightful" (William H. McNeill, New York Review of Books) book, Jared Diamond convincingly argues that geographical and environmental factors shaped the modern world. Societies that had had a head start in food production advanced beyond the hunter-gatherer stage, and then developed religion - as well as nasty germs and potent weapons of war - and adventured on sea and land to conquer and decimate preliterate cultures. A major advance in our understanding of human societies, Guns, Germs, and Steel chronicles the way that the modern world came to be and stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human history. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize, and the Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal.
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View all 16 comments |
Kirkus Reviews (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-25 00:00>
MacArthur fellow and UCLA evolutionary biologist Diamond (The Third Chimpanzee, 1992, etc.) takes as his theme no less than the rise of human civilizations. On the whole this is an impressive achievement, with nods to the historians, anthropologists, and others who have laid the groundwork. Diamond tells us that the impetus for the book came from a native New Guinea friend, Yali, who asked him, ``Why is it that you white people developed so much cargo and brought it to New Guinea, but we black people had little cargo of our own?'' The long and short of it, says Diamond, is biogeography. It just so happened that 13,000 years ago, with the ending of the last Ice Age, there was an area of the world better endowed with the flora and fauna that would lead to the take-off toward civilization: that valley of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers we now call the Fertile Crescent. There were found the wild stocks that became domesticated crops of wheat and barley. Flax was available for the development of cloth. There was an abundance of large mammals that could be domesticated: sheep, goats, cattle. Once agriculture is born and animals domesticated, a kind of positive feedback drives the growth toward civilization. People settle down; food surpluses can be stored so population grows. And with it comes a division of labor, the rise of an elite class, the codification of rules, and language. It happened, too, in China, and later in Mesoamerica. But the New World was not nearly as abundant in the good stuff. And like Africa, it is oriented North and South, resulting in different climates, which make the diffusion of agriculture and animals problematic. While you have heard many of these arguments before, Diamond has brought them together convincingly. The prose is not brilliant and there are apologies and redundancies that we could do without. But a fair answer to Yali's question this surely is, and gratifyingly, it makes clear that race has nothing to do with who does or does not develop cargo. |
William H McNeil (The New York Review of Books) (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-25 00:00>
Guns, Germs and Steel is an artful, informative and delightful book...there is nothing like a radically new angle of vision for bringing out unsuspected dimensions of subject and that is what Jared Diamond has done. |
Colin Renfrew, Nature (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-25 00:00>
A book of remarkable scope...One of the most important and readable works on the human past. |
Edward O. Wilson (Pellegrino University Professor, Harvard University) (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-25 00:00>
No scientist brings more experience from the laboratory and field, none thinks more deeply about social issues or addresses them with greater clarity, than Jared Diamond as illustrated by Guns, Germs, and Steel. In this remarkably readable book he shows how history and biology can enrich one another to produce a deeper understanding of the human condition. |
View all 16 comments |
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