John Clark’s Reviews > Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies > Status Update
John Clark
is on page 238 of 498
The history of writing systems is fascinating, and, like so much of Diamond's book, is presented in such a way that the broad strokes are clear and reasonable, and I want to investigate these forces in more detail.
— Nov 24, 2010 01:03PM
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John’s Previous Updates
John Clark
is on page 295 of 498
One of my friends commented that the title of the book is a bit sensationalist because really, Diamond identifies the ultimate causes of "the Fates of Human Societies" to be the intertwined forces of food production and population pressure. Yes, the title may be sensationalist, but food is really that important.
— Jan 03, 2011 12:37PM
John Clark
is on page 211 of 498
Could a slightly differently configured world have had a dramatically different history?
— Nov 23, 2010 03:46PM
John Clark
is on page 130 of 498
Diamond provides a fascinating and very approachable depiction of the symbiotic evolution of plants into crops as human culture also evolved. At the same time, this provides a visceral sense of how living things are constantly in motion, adapting to one another.
— Nov 17, 2010 01:51PM
John Clark
is on page 117 of 498
Wild wheat was plentiful in the Fertile Crescent, and it led humans there to develop the tools for its harvest that would later allow for domestication.
— Nov 16, 2010 03:57PM
John Clark
is on page 85 of 498
Diamond provides a concise summary of the proximate argument that disease and better technology favored the conquerors; now we need to see why the conquerors had those in the first place.
— Nov 12, 2010 06:12PM
