Book details
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
by Yuval Noah Harari
2011 · Random House
About the book
Yuval Noah Harari tracks the biological and social evolution of Homo sapiens from our origins as a minor African primate to our current dominance over the biosphere. He identifies the Cognitive Revolution as the catalyst for our success, arguing that our unique ability to believe in shared myths—such as money, laws, and gods—allowed thousands of strangers to cooperate effectively. The narrative traces how the Agricultural Revolution shifted humans from foragers into settlers tied to domestic crops, followed by the Scientific Revolution which dismantled traditional ignorance in favor of empirical discovery and global capitalism.
Readers interested in the intersections of anthropology and macro-history will find a framework for understanding how belief systems dictate modern world structures. The book appeals to those looking to analyze social institutions through an evolutionary lens rather than a political one. By the final chapter, the reader gains a perspective on how artificial intelligence and genetic engineering now threaten to end the history of the species as we currently define it. They walk away with a functional theory on why human structures remain fragile despite our technological mastery.
Details
- Published
- 2011
- Publisher
- Random House
- ISBN
- 9781448190690
- Language
- EN