Andrew asked this question about Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies:
Many historians have reexamined and abandoned the notion that Africa was always primitive and poor. John K. Thornton, for example, argues that Africa's backwardness is a recent phenomenon; before perhaps the 18th century, societies in sub-Saharan Africa were just as advanced as those in Europe or Asia. How does this square with Diamond's theory that Africa was geographically predisposed to poverty and backwardness?
Adam Daniels well i think that thought is just but not quite the best to excel in this topic because does it really involve learning if we dont know the answer and…morewell i think that thought is just but not quite the best to excel in this topic because does it really involve learning if we dont know the answer and if we do how r we growing and what the idea for anyways but yea i agrre way back then was like the secrets of why countries adapt to to learning there own ways are analytically examined to be sqaure i would seggest (less)
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