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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A history of humanity's past 13,000 years, Dec 28 2003
----------------------------------------------------------- How did the West grow rich and conquer the world? It wasn't racial superiority, as the Victorians thought - indeed, Diamond gives evidence that the average New Guinean may well be smarter than the average Westerner. His own one-sentence summary of the book is: "History followed different courses for different peoples because of differences among peoples' environments, not because of biological differences among the peoples themselves"[clunk]. Or, it's the environment, stupid. Or, the West got lucky.I'm uncomfortable with history-as-polemics, but Diamond (usually) keeps his facts and interpretations pretty well separated. And this is a wonderful one-volume history of the human race. It is unusual, and refreshing, to read a history written by a distinguished and literate biological scientist. History isn't generally considered to be science - "it's just one damn thing after another." But then, you could say the same for large parts of astronomy, biology & geology. 13,000 years ago, the most recent Ice Age was ending, and people everywhere still made their living as hunter-gatherers. Diamond starts his story at the dawn of civilization. By Chapter 3, he's recounting Pizarro's conquest of the Inca empire in 1532. In an afternoon, 168 Spanish soldiers routed an army of 80,000, killed 7,000, and captured the Inca emperor. It's not surprising that the Spaniards would feel superior. But the conquistadores' invisible allies had been at work since 1492 - smallpox from Spain had killed the previous Inca emperor and his heir, setting off a war of succession that fatally weakened the empire. Diseases from Europe would ultimately kill up to 95% of the native peoples of the Americas, often before they saw their first European. The old American cultures were doomed from first contact, even if the Old World visitors had been peaceful explorers and traders. 12,000 years of isolation had left native Americans with no resistance to the lethal European microbes. Where did these diseases come from, and why didn't the Indians return the favor by infecting Eurasia? Many came originally from domestic animals (for example, measles and smallpox from cattle), and required large, dense populations to evolve. The Indians had few domestic animals - one reason why they were poorer than Eurasians, and those (fortuitously) had no diseases that "made the jump" from animals to humans - good evidence for Diamond's "history as luck" hypothesis. Diamond's history is wonderful, full of new science, strange facts, and great anecdotes. The polemics get repetitious and a bit defensive at times, but can be safely skimmed. This would have been a better book had it been written as straight history, letting the facts speak for themselves - but it's still well worth reading. Recommended. Diamond, a professor of physiology at UCLA, is a frequent contributor to Discover, Natural History, and Geo magazines. -- Pete Tillman is a consulting geologist based in Arizona.
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