Diamond, Jared, Guns, Germs and Steel: A short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years . 1997 my own book scans preserved In this Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Jared Diamond argues that both geography and the environment played major roles in determining the shape of the modern world. This argument runs counter to the usual theories that cite biology as the crucial factor. Diamond claims that the cultures that were first able to domesticate plants and animals were then able to develop writing skills, as well as make advances in the creation of government, technology, weaponry, and immunity to disease PRIVATE Prologue: Yali's Question: The regionally differing courses of history 13 Ch. 1 Up to the Starting Line: What happened on all the continents before 11,000 B.C.? 35 Ch. 2 A Natural Experiment of History: How geography molded societies on Polynesian islands 53 Ch. 3 Collision at Cajamarca: Why the Inca emperor Atahuallpa did not capture King Charles I of Spain 67 Ch. 4 Farmer Power: The roots of guns, germs, and steel 85 Ch. 5 History's Haves and Have-Nots: Geographic differences in the onset of food production 93 Ch. 6 To Farm or Not to Farm: Causes of the spread of food production 104 Ch. 7 How to Make an Almond: The unconscious development of ancient crops 114 Ch. 8 Apples or Indians: Why did peoples of some regions fail to domesticate plants? 131 Ch. 9 Zebras, Unhappy Marriages, and the Anna Karenina Principle: Why were most big wild mammal species never domesticated? 157 Ch. 10 Spacious Skies and Tilted Axes: Why did food production spread at different rates on different continents? 176 Ch. 11 Lethal Gift of Livestock: The evolution of germs 195 Ch. 12 Blueprints and Borrowed Letters: The evolution of writing 215 Ch. 13 Necessity's Mother: The evolution of technology 239 Ch. 14 From Egalitarianism to Kleptocracy: The evolution of government and religion 265 Ch. 15 Yali's People: The histories of Australia and New Guinea 295 Ch. 16 How China became Chinese: The history of East Asia 322 Ch. 17 Speedboat to Polynesia: The history of the Austronesian expansion 334 Ch. 18 Hemispheres Colliding: The histories of Eurasia and the Americas compared 354 Ch. 19 How Africa became Black: The history of Africa 376 Epilogue: The Future of Human History as a Science 403 Acknowledgments 427 Further Readings 429 Credits 459 Index 461 PREFACE why Is world history like an onion? THIS BOOK ATTEMPTS TO PROVIDE A SHORT HISTORY OF EVERYbody for the last 13,000 years. The question motivating the book is: Why did history unfold differently on different continents? In case this question immediately makes you shudder at the thought that you are about to read a racist treatise, you aren't; as you will see, the answers to the question don't involve human racial differences at all. The book's emphasis is on the search for ultimate explanations, and on pushing back the chain of historical causation as far as possible. Most books that set out to recount world history concentrate on histories of literate Eurasia and North African societies. Native societies of other parts of the world—sub-Saharan Africa, the Americas, Island Southeast Asia, Australia, New Guinea, the Pacific Islands—receive only brief treatment, mainly as concerns what happened to them very late in their history, after they were discovered and subjugated by western Europeans. Even within Eurasia, much more space gets devoted to the history of western Eurasia than of China, India, Japan, tropical Southeast Asia, and other eastern Eurasian societies. History before the emergence of writing around 3,000 b.c. also receives brief treatment, although it constitutes 99.9% of the five-million-year history of the human species. 10 • PREFACE Such narrowly focused accounts of world history suffer from three disadvantages. First, increasing numbers of people today are, quite understandably, interested in other societies besides those of western Eurasia. After all, those 'other' societies encompass most of the world's population and the vast majority of the world's ethnic, cultural, and liguistic groups. Some of them already are, and others are becoming, among the world's most powerful economies and political forces. Second, even for people specifically interested in the shaping of the modern world, a history limited to developments since the emergence of writing cannot provide deep understanding. It is not the case that societies on the different continents were comparable to each other until 3,000 b.c., whereupon western Eurasian societies suddenly developed writing and began for the first time to pull ahead in other respects as well. Instead, already by 3,000 b.c., there were Eurasian and North African societies not only with incipient writing but also with centralized state governments, cities, widespread use of metal tools and weapons, use of domesticated animals for transport and traction and mechanical power, and reliance on agriculture and domestic animals for food. Throughout most or all parts of other continents, none of those things existed at that time; some but not all of them emerged later in parts of the Native Americas and sub-Saharan Africa, but only over the course of the next five millenia; and none of them emerged in Aboriginal Australia. That should already warn us that the roots of western Eurasian dominance in the modern world lie in the preliterate past before 3,000 b.c. (By western Eurasian dominance, I mean the dominance of western Eurasian societies themselves and of the societies that they spawned on other continents.) Third, a history focused on western Eurasian societies completely bypasses the obvious big question. Why were those societies the ones that became disproportionately powerful and innovative? The usual answers to that question invoke proximate forces, such as the rise of capitalism, mercantilism, scientific inquiry, technology, and nasty germs that killed peoples of other continents when they came into contact with western Eurasians. But why did those ingredients of conquest arise in western Eurasia, and arise elsewhere only to a lesser degree or not at all? All those ingredients are just proximate factors, not ultimate
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