Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies (Random House audiobooks) (CD-Audio)
$21.13 - Save $3.87 15% off - RRP $25.00 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Guns, Germs, and Steel In this Pulitzer Prize winner, Diamond dismantles racially based theories of human history by revealing the environmental factors actually responsible for history's broadest patterns.
Full description- Publisher: Random House Inc
- Published: 07 June 2011
- Format: CD-Audio
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Society & Culture: General | Anthropology | Human Geography | Classical History / Classical Civilisation
- ISBN 13: 9780307932426 ISBN 10: 0307932427
- Sales rank: 102,079
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Full description for Guns, Germs, and Steel
Why did Eurasians conquer, displace, or decimate Native Americans, Australians, and Africans, instead of the reverse? Evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human history by revealing the environmental factors actually responsible for history's broadest patterns. The story begins 13,000 years ago, when Stone Age hunter-gatherers constituted the entire human population. Around that time, the 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 Andes, and other areas gave peoples of those regions a head start. Only societies that advanced beyond the hunter-gatherer stage acquired a potential for developing writing, technology, government, and organized religions--as well as those nasty germs and potent weapons of war. It was those societies, that expanded to new homelands at the expense of other peoples. The most familiar examples involve the conquest of non-European peoples by Europeans in the last 500 years, beginning with voyages in search of precious metals and spices, and often leading to invasion of native lands and decimation of native inhabitants.

