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Guns Germs And Steel Summary

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Beginning his scientific career in physiology, then expanding into evolutionary biology and biogeography Jared Diamond is the author of Guns, Germs, and Steel. On July 1972, Mr. Diamond visited New Guinea where he studied bird evolution along a beach. He met a local New Guinean named Yali, who would ask Diamond a question, which would take him twenty-five years to try to find an answer. Yali’s questions, "Why is it that you white people developed so much cargo and brought it to New Guinea, but we black people had little cargo of our own?.” Guns, Germs, and Steel attempt to answer Yali’s question through following the first civilizations. Diamond discusses why some societies were able to develop writing, agriculture, change from framers to gathers while other societies stayed the same. …show more content…

Diamond starts from the beginning, which I think is beneficial for many readers. He starts with how a particular society would start up then how they would either grow in population or decrease. At times the book gets boring for a reader who doesn’t know a certain group and when Mr. Diamond to me tends to crowd a whole lot of information on a page. Chapter 12 Blueprints and Borrowed Letters to me was probably the most boring chapter. The author in this chapter compares how different societies developed their own form of writing at different times and why the societies needed a form of writing in the first place. He goes back and forth between Chinese writing, Japanese writing (kanji), Egyptian hieroglyphs, Maya glyphs, and Sumerian cuneiform and many more. For a reader like me, there were 7 illustrations that would help me understand this chapter more without getting confused. Illustrations where another helpful contribution added to the book that

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