Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond — book cover

Book details

Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies

by Jared Diamond

1997 · W. W. Norton & Company

About the book

Jared Diamond argues that the uneven distribution of wealth and power across different continents stems from environmental and geographical factors rather than biological superiority. He traces human history from the end of the Pleistocene, identifying how the presence of domesticable wild grasses and large mammals allowed specific regions in the Fertile Crescent and Eurasia to transition to sedentary farming. This head start in food production led to dense populations, the development of centralized governments, and the inadvertent evolution of lethal pathogens. Eurasia’s horizontal east-west axis facilitated the rapid spread of these agricultural innovations and immunities, unlike the vertical axes of the Americas or Africa.

Readers interested in macro-history and evolutionary biology turn to this work to understand the mechanical causes of global inequality. The text provides a framework based on ecology and topography rather than race or culture. Those who finish the book walk away with a scientific explanation for why European colonial expansion succeeded through the advantages of metallurgy, literacy, and resistance to disease. It functions as a global survey of how landscape dictates the success of a civilization.

Details

Published
1997
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
ISBN
9780393069228
Language
EN