Guns, Germs and Steel

The Fates of Human Societies

Hardcover, 480 pages

English language

Published 1997 by W.W. Norton.

ISBN:
978-0-393-03891-0
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OCLC Number:
519701464

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(2 reviews)

Why did Eurasians conquer, displace, or decimate Native Americans, Australians, and Africans, instead of the reverse? In this groundbreaking book, evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human history by revealing the environmental factors actually responsible for history's broadest patterns. Here, at last, is a world history that really is a history of all the world's peoples, a unified narrative of human life even more intriguing and important than accounts of dinosaurs and glaciers.

The story begins 13,000 years ago, when Stone Age hunter-gatherers constituted the entire human population. Around that time, paths of development of human societies on different continents began to diverge greatly. Early domestication of wild plants and animals in the Fertile Crescent, China, Mesoamerica, the southeastern United States, and other areas gave peoples of those regions a head start. Why wheat and corn, cattle and pigs, and the modern world's other "blockbuster" crops …

3 editions

Go off about them plants, king

A Papua New Guin-eeaboo infodumps about agricultural history and, in doing so, attempts to understand why some people got the short end of the stick in history, and why others got the longer end. In short: No cows, no luck.

Lots of good insights in this one, though it does have a slight smell of mid 90's / early 2000's Neoliberal idealism, which mildly dates the book.