Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
by Jared Diamond
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 5479)
Read in June, 2008
This was a very engaging read, and I can’t think of a better airplane book (which is where I read 3/4 of it) - not only b/c of the irony (airplane travel consumes more energy and thus unleashes more environmental destruction than any other individual activity ), but b/c it’s written in such a way as to keep you interested and turning the pages, but doesn’t tax the brain with genuine intellectual challenges the way quality literature (Michaux, Beckett, Musil, etc.) does.
By charting bot...more
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I read this book over six weeks from February through March 2006. It took a lot of effort but was excellent. It is filled with excellent observations on different societies and why they failed or excelled. Much of his observations were new to me but were well documented and reasonable. In addition, to information on various societies was an introduction to various field methods of study that were amazing. So, he shows what is the current research into archeology (and all its arcane spec...more
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Read in July, 2007
I considered giving this book 4 instead of 5 stars simply because it can be over-dense in its detail and the style can be rather dry - but then I figured that says more about my stamina and laziness than about the quality of the book, so the book gets 5 and I get a 4 for effort. We're all winners.
So despite the headline-grabbing title, the author Jared Diamond - a cross between an Amish garden gnome and avuncular Glastonbury festival supremo if you go by his picture - tries its darndest to ...more
So despite the headline-grabbing title, the author Jared Diamond - a cross between an Amish garden gnome and avuncular Glastonbury festival supremo if you go by his picture - tries its darndest to ...more
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Read in May, 2007
COLLAPSE BY JARED DIAMOND: Jared Diamond, renowned author of the Pulitzer-winning Gun, Germs, and Steel, returns with another piece of mind-blowing work that will simply astonish any reader. In his last book, Diamond took us on a journey into the history of humanity, with cogent and logical answers for why our ancestors did the things they did, tying it in with geological and biological processes; how location matters very much for why certain of our ancestors did much better than others. Guns...more
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Read in January, 2005
The Pulitzer-prize winning "Guns, Germs and Steel" by this dude forever changed the way I look at history. And believe me, I am a history buff of sorts so this means a lot. Unfortunately, "Collapse" fails to measure up to that classic.
The real problem with Collapse isn't the research that goes into the thesis, or even the soundness of the thesis itself (though there are some qualms I have about how politically unstable Mongolia is or basing his analysis of cod fisheries o...more
The real problem with Collapse isn't the research that goes into the thesis, or even the soundness of the thesis itself (though there are some qualms I have about how politically unstable Mongolia is or basing his analysis of cod fisheries o...more
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Guns, Germs and Steel occasionally felt like monday morning quarterbacking, but Collapse is superb. In GG&S, Diamond tried to explain how technologies that evolved in some places did not in others, how some communities thrived due to excess food and more advanced agriculture, while others, perpetually on the verge of starvation, had to devote all of their time to dealing with that and thus didn't have time for building the Parthenon. The argument was not airtight - his notion of what ...more
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Read in April, 2008
In his previous, fantastic book Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Diamond explained to the world how different nations and cultures dominated other nations based on the domesticatable plant and animal species they had available to them. It wasn't about the color of their skin. For that book he won the Pulitzer Prize.
In this, his more recent book, it appears he is throwing all that ...more
In this, his more recent book, it appears he is throwing all that ...more
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Read in May, 2008
(this book is bigger than I thought...)
I'm finally done! I know, nine weeks later...
For a specific rating, I would say the content is 4.5, readability is 3. This book is definitely worth reading, even if you don't plan on putting in the effort to thoroughly read each section. The section on ancient cultures if interesting, but his level of detail is not necessary to understanding the main points of his book. For example, I found myself slightly skimming the paragraphs describing prec...more
I'm finally done! I know, nine weeks later...
For a specific rating, I would say the content is 4.5, readability is 3. This book is definitely worth reading, even if you don't plan on putting in the effort to thoroughly read each section. The section on ancient cultures if interesting, but his level of detail is not necessary to understanding the main points of his book. For example, I found myself slightly skimming the paragraphs describing prec...more
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recommends it for:
Everyone
The thesis here is that the success or failure of any culture depends upon five factors:
Climate change,
Environmental preservation or degradation,
The presence of friendly external trade partners,
The presence of external enemies, and finally,
That society's ability and willingness to respond to the previous four factors.
To develop his theory, Diamond discusses about a dozen different societies, past and present, which had experienced various combinations of troubles with the first f...more
Climate change,
Environmental preservation or degradation,
The presence of friendly external trade partners,
The presence of external enemies, and finally,
That society's ability and willingness to respond to the previous four factors.
To develop his theory, Diamond discusses about a dozen different societies, past and present, which had experienced various combinations of troubles with the first f...more
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Read in March, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in May, 2008
This book gets 5 stars for nobility alone-- it's the kind of book that really might change the world. But it was also, for me anyway, a deeply absorbing and moving read, worthy of 5 stars for the eloquence of his prose.
Jared Diamond is a scientist, and as such he's committed to looking at history and geography objectively. He builds his theories of past collapses on sound evidence, and acknowledges the limitations of his methods up front. But instead of seeming cold and abstract, his wo...more
Jared Diamond is a scientist, and as such he's committed to looking at history and geography objectively. He builds his theories of past collapses on sound evidence, and acknowledges the limitations of his methods up front. But instead of seeming cold and abstract, his wo...more
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Read in February, 2008
While offering up a slight spoiler, I am glad that the author is 'cautiously optimistic' about the future, because after having read this book, I certainly didn't feel that way.
Although it is an environmental book, perhaps my favourite part was that which focused on the economics, Montana. This rural state used to have one of the highest per-capita incomes in the land, now the lowest...oh yeah...and faced with environmentally devastating problems that may never go away. The whole section ree...more
Although it is an environmental book, perhaps my favourite part was that which focused on the economics, Montana. This rural state used to have one of the highest per-capita incomes in the land, now the lowest...oh yeah...and faced with environmentally devastating problems that may never go away. The whole section ree...more
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Read in January, 2008
This incisive thesis starts where Guns, Germs, and Steel left off. What is the future for our world? How can we learn from the past to avoid catastrophic failures in the future. Dr. Diamond takes you on a much shorter tour around space/time to investigate the contributing factors to societal collapse. His five point framework consists of: environmental damage, climate change, hostile neighbors, friendly trade partners, and most importantly--society's responses to its environmental problems....more
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Read in February, 2008
recommended to Nicole by:
My old book club
Wow, if you've ever wanted to feel guilty and despondent about the environment and how we abuse it, this is the book for you. Diamond is trying to make a point, that being, if we destroy our environment, our civilization is likely to follow suit. He analyzed various past civilizations that are now gone, and found that in addition to other problems they were facing, abuse of their environment was a key problem. He also took a look at several modern cultures that are struggling with a shortage ...more
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Read in February, 2008
To begin, I enjoyed this book. In many ways Diamond beats a dead horse about case studies that anyone having taken an intro environmental science course will be familiar with. But, he also provides many counter examples while exploring deeper questions into the processes that have shaped human societal histories. Overall, the underlying philosophy of the book is similar to that which he argued in Guns, germs and steel; that racial or genetic differences between populations are not re...more
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