Matt Lehrer reviewed Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond
Very convincing, possibly misleading
4 stars
I understand the historian perspective on this book is very negative but I thoroughly enjoyed and was convinced by it at the time
498 pages
English language
Published Dec. 27, 2005
I understand the historian perspective on this book is very negative but I thoroughly enjoyed and was convinced by it at the time
Jared Diamond's #GunsGermsandSteel exhaustively answers a core question of human history posed by a New Guinean friend, Yali. Why do core (developed world) countries have so many manufactured goods while peripheral (developing) countries have almost none?
Jared's thesis rejects the white supremacist idea that Eurasian people have intellectual or genetic superiority and proves that gaps in power are created by an unequal distribution of geographic and environmental advantages. These advantages include rich land for agriculture, animals that can be easily domesticated, axes of trade that helped colonizing countries develop the guns, germs, and steel that lead to their dominance.
If you haven't read Guns, Germs, and Steel, you should.
Brilliant. Highlighted so many passages. Offers insight into the history of the world over the past 13,000 years. Plausible argument for why different societies in the world are at their current state.