Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies (New Edition)

by Jared Diamond
Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies (New Edition)
book data
14,624 ratings, 3.98 average rating, 2,192 reviews (more data...)
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published
July 11th 2005 (first published 1997) by W. W. Norton

binding
Hardcover, 512 pages

literary awards
Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction (1998)

isbn
0393061310    (isbn13: 9780393061314)

description
Explaining what William McNeill called The Rise of the West has become the central problem in the study of global history. In Guns, Germs, and Steel J...more




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Jim
07/27/07
Jim rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2006
The Purist

I give you now Professor Twist,
A conscientious scientist,
Trustees exclaimed, "He never bungles!"
And sent him off to distant jungles.
Camped on a tropic riverside,
One day he missed his loving bride.
She had, the guide informed him later,
Been eaten by an alligator.
Professor Twist could not but smile.
"You mean," he said, "a crocodile."

That bit of Ogden Nash whimsy came into my head as...more
Like this review?   yes   (15 people liked it)
  1 comment

Mike
05/18/07
Mike rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

Read in March, 2006
recommends it for: Folks with some interest in ancient history
Author Jared Diamond's two-part thesis is: 1) the most important theme in human history is that of civilizations beating the crap out of each other, 2) the reason the beat-ors were Europeans and the beat-ees the Aboriginees, Mayans, et. al. is because of the geographical features of where each civilization happened to develop. Whether societies developed gunpowder, written language, and other technological niceties, argues Diamond, is completely a function of whether they emerged amidst travel-...more
Like this review?   yes   (16 people liked it)
  5 comments

Yeshua
01/31/08
Yeshua rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

In 1532, Francisco Pizarro and a band of 168 Spaniards punctured the heart of the Inca Empire and proceeded to capture its emperor, decimate its citizens, and plunder its gold. Why didn’t it happen the other way around? Why didn't the Incas sail to Europe, capture Charles V, kill his subjects, and loot his castles and cathedrals? Jared Diamond attempts to answer this question in Guns, Germs & Steel.

Why have Europeans tended to dominate other peoples on other continents? Does it ha...more
Like this review?   yes   (12 people liked it)
  1 comment

Radhika
Read in January, 2007
recommends it for: Humanists, geographers, omnivorous readers
I give this book 4 stars because it has some very interesting ideas that provoke thought and inquiry. It also offers plausible explanations that often ring true. I don't give it 5 stars because it suffers from certain drawbacks.

I love his analysis and interpretation of causes that show why civilization arose variously in diverse and distinct locations of the planet. I love how his causes make sense. His rejection of race-based politics is quite clear. I like
how his explan...more
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Molly
01/11/08
Molly rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

recommends it for: ONLY people in Anthropology with a great understanding of theory.
This is what happens when you take an intelligent person, and casually make a few mentions of a field of study they have no knowledge of.

Mr. Diamond, NOT an anthropologist, takes Marvin Harris' theory of cultural materialism and uses it to explain everything in life, history, and the current state of the world.

Materialism is a way of looking at human culture which, for lack of a better way to explain it easily here, says that people's material needs and goods determine be...more
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  8 comments

Joel
06/05/07
Joel rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

Read in October, 2000
When the Dropkick Murphies were at the height of their popularity, I'd often have this awkward conversation where someone would ask me what I thought of them and I'd say I didn't like them. Their fans were really evangelical for some reason, so I'd usually be pressed to explain myself. I'd list the reasons: songwriting so-so, macho bullshit, Americans trying to play up their Irish roots almost always sound silly and, finally, that I found the working-class oi!/skin tradition they were vaguely ro...more
Like this review?   yes   (8 people liked it)
  11 comments

Elizabeth King
Germ Guns & Steel

It is a thesis,
His thesis being; that all animals are created equal… but not all animals sleep in a bed with sheets.
Why?
Because in addition to needing tree for wood to make looms, herders to shear sheep & weavers to make sheets, you also need (DHU) SHEEP.
Yep, if you are unlucky enough to be born on a continent or onto part of a continent with only anteaters, there is no fucking way you are going to get sheets, no matter how smart you are.
...more
Like this review?   yes   (5 people liked it)
  1 comment

Deborah
Read in January, 2008
Having read Charles C. Mann's 1491 immediately before Guns, Germs, and Steel, I was all-too aware of the dated nature of many of Diamond's assumptions about the New World. (And therefore I would highly recommend 1491 to anyone interested in learning about the latest and greatest developments in knowledge concerning the early history of the Americas.) This seed of doubt concerning the accuracy of Diamond's assumptions about the Americas prevented me from fully appreciating what he had to say ab...more
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Alex
11/02/07
Alex rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

bookshelves: books-read-in-2006
Read in July, 2006
GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL: THE FATES OF HUMAN SOCIETIES BY JARED DIAMOND: This is one of those books that takes you a while to read -- it's pretty heavy non-fiction -- and yet at the end of it, you feel like Hippocrates, a Muslim scientist, or Leonardo Da Vinci must have felt at the realization of a great discovery. The Eureka! moment. This book is kind of like the movie Hotel Rwanda: the movie was life-altering for me, and just made every other movie that came out that year seem tawdry and unimpor...more
Like this review?   yes   (4 people liked it)
  1 comment

Manny
12/10/08
Manny rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

Read in March, 2007
I liked this book, and it taught me a bunch of things I hadn't known before I read it. Jared Diamond has clearly had a more interesting life than most of us, and spent significant amounts of time in a wide variety of different kinds of society, all over the world. He says he got the basic idea from a conversation he had back in the 70s with a friend in New Guinea. His friend, who later became a leader in the independence movement, wanted to talk about "cargo" (manufactured goods, techn...more
Like this review?   yes   (4 people liked it)
  2 comments

Miriam Axel-lute
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Miriam by: Jon Spaihts
recommends it for: just about anyone

Well, I understand why this got a Pulitzer. I hope every student is having to read it in high school. I'm afraid they're not.

Although Diamond's main purpose is to answer the question "Why did the peoples of some continents conquer and dispossess others?" in a non-racist fashion (and succeeds convincingly), the book in many ways is a history of the world, and one less Eurocentric and less focused on irrelevant details than many whose point is explicitly trying to do th...more
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Curtis Abbott
bookshelves: history
Read in January, 2005
Before buying and reading this book, I read some reviews, and frankly, they didn't inspire me. They talked about it being a history of the world, they talked about its immense, ambitious scope. Such talk causes my crap detectors to tingle. I did finally buy it after reading a laudatory review by someone I respect. And I'm glad I did, because I found it to be absolutely top notch. The phrase "history of the world" misguides because the book is entirely about pre-history. The story...more
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Marissa
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: people who need help falling asleep before bed?
UPDATE: I closed the file on this one I had a dinner-party conversation last Friday that began with someone saying, "You know, almonds are one of the oldest domesticated plant species in the world." And I said, "Oh yeah! That's right! I think I learned that in 'Guns, Germs and Steel.'" And the other person said, "Oh yeah, I think you're right" (P.S. I'm paraphrasing), and we both sort of said, "Right before Jared Diamond put me to sleep." So, as you can se...more
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Will
12/15/08
Will rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

Read in February, 2000
Diamond seeks to dispel the myth that humans of different geographic and racial origins have inherently varying mental capabilities. The arguments he seeks to counter are those stating that since "civilization" came to full flower in the "western" countries (white) and not in places where other races dominated, that this indicated an innate superiority by Caucasians. He provides a stunning analysis of why civilization emerged in the places in which it did. He tells us of the ...more
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Rhiannon
bookshelves: history, non-fiction, science
Read in May, 2008
I have this awesome picture in my head in which Jared Diamond did not write this book. He instead wrote a detailed, engaging account of the history of plant and animal domestication.

"But Rhiannon," you might say, "doesn't that remove his entire thesis, that geography determined just about everything about the course of human civilization?"

And, I would respond yes, it does.

"And, isn't that kind of removing the whole book?"

...more
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Flint
05/24/07
Flint rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

bookshelves: history, nonfiction, science
Guns, Germs and Steel is a good book, and I suggest you follow up with reading Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed.

However, if you find yourself interested in primatology and evolutionary biology, I don't suggest you read Diamond's The Third Chimpanzee. Instead, I recommend Frans de Waal's Our Inner Ape, unlike Diamond, de Wall doesn't ignore Bonobos.

I do have one significant disagreement with Diamond, the degree which he is a material determinist. While I...more
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  2 comments

Jefke
11/19/08
Jefke rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 1565115147)

Read in May, 2008
English at te bottom.

In het nederlands: "Zwaarden, paarden en ziektekiemen" Ik heb de Engelse versie gelezen.

Ik heb dit boek als luisterboek beluisterd ipv gelezen. Na het lezen van "Ondergang" of "Collapse", had ik trek naar meer Jared Diamond.
Een Papoease (autochtone) vriend van Jared vraagt hem waarom de Europeanen de wereld veroverd hebben en niet de Papoea of Indianen... Diamond toont in dit boek aan dat het niets met verschil in i...more
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Julianne
bookshelves: non-fiction
My three-star rating has nothing to do with the quality of the ideas in this book; I think they're all top-notch. My lukewarm response has to do instead with their presentation.

Jared Diamond's prose is very readable but prolix. How, one might ask, could I find prolix a book which purports to condense the entire history of humankind into 425 pages? (As Diamond himself points out, compressing 13,000 years of history into roughly 400 pages works out to "an average of about one pag...more
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Monica
04/27/08
Monica rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

I had to write a paper on this book for my first class in graduate school. I am going to look to see if I still have it...hold on...I am totally pasting it in:

“I’ve set myself the modest task of trying to explain the broad pattern of human history, on all the continents, for the last 13,000 years.” While Diamond’s explanation of his prize-winning book’s goal is clearly oversimplified, the impetus for writing the book is not: while doing research in New Guinea, a native frie...more
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Nate
02/29/08
Nate rated it: 1 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0739467352)

Read in March, 2007
This may be the most over-rated book in the history of book rating. The point he is making is that we in Western Civilazation haven't built skyscrapers, made Moon landings, mass produced automobiles, eradicated polio (or for that matter lived indoors with running water) while aborigines in certain remote outposts still hunt and gather in isolated tribes because we are inherently any smarter or more industrious than those individuals. Of course he is mostly right, but why is this considered suc...more
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17427
Please make one selection from the Reading List collection of titles below. This is Poll V (IV) on book selection).

Idea for Universal History with a Cosmopolitan Purpose
by Immanuel Kant

Idea for a Universal History with a Cosmopolitan Purpose
 
  1 vote, 3.4%

The Persian Expedition by Xenophon

The Persian Expedition (Penguin Classics)
 
  4 votes, 13.8%

Retribution - The Battle of Japan - 1944-1945 by Max Hastings

Retribution  The Battle for Japan, 1944-45
 
  0 votes, 0.0%

The History of England from the Accession of James the Second by Thomas Babington Macaulay (Penquin - abridged edition)

The History of England (Penguin Classics)
 
  2 votes, 6.9%

The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman

The Guns of August
 
  2 votes, 6.9%

The First World War by John Keegan

The First World War
 
  9 votes, 31.0%

Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond

Guns, Germs, and Steel  The Fates of Human Societies (New Edition)
 
  7 votes, 24.1%

The Decline and Fall of the Third Reich by William Shirer

The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
 
  2 votes, 6.9%

The White Nile by Alan Moorehead

The White Nile
 
  1 vote, 3.4%

Plutarch's Lives by Plutarch - Volume I (Selection will be for Volume I)

Plutarch's Lives 1
 
  1 vote, 3.4%

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Guns, Germs, and Steel (Paperback)
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quotes from this book

"In short, Europe’s colonization of Africa had nothing to do with differences between European and African peoples themselves, as white racists assume. Rather, it was due to accidents of geography and biogeography—in particular, to the continents’ different areas, axes, and suites of wild plant and animal species. That is, the different historical trajectories of Africa and Europe stem ultimately from differences in real estate." More quotes...


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Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (Paperback) by Jared Diamond
The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Anim... by Jared Diamond
Why Is Sex Fun?: The Evolution of Human Sexuality (Science Maste... by Jared Diamond
The Birds of Northern Melanesia: Speciation, Ecology, and Biogeo... by Ernst Mayr

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