guns germs and steel essay

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    easier for empires, literacy, and steel weapons to develop. Literacy develops due to the demand of a government and records because of the dense population. The government would help control the large population and records would allow the government to do taxes. For farm production to thrive many people had to be getting food but not all would go, this would allow the people who didn't gather food to have time to become craftsmen. Some even learning to work with steel and iron in order to create weapons

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    Eurasian Dominance In Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond, Diamond’s explains that Europeans progressed faster than Native Americans technologically. Since the beginnings of time Europeans advanced faster than Native Americans, but why? To begin with, the Eurasian land mass had more species of large animals to domesticate. In addition, Eurasia had more varieties of grains for large scale farming. Finally, Eurasia was more accessible for trade between civilizations. To begin with, the Eurasian

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    The premise behind Guns, Germs, and Steel is explained with one question: why did Europeans develop faster and come to conquer other lands whereas others did not? Diamond spends the next 19 chapters using empirical data to establish a basis as to how different civilizations became so staggered developmentally. He offers an explanation based on geographical location, domestication of both food and animals, and environmental factors. Farming, I learned, has an enormous impact on the growth of civilization

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    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

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    fraught with pitfalls and easy-to-make assumptions about cultures, specifically why some have advanced far enough to control the majority of the world while others have never managed to advance beyond simple hunting and gathering. In his book “Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies”, author Jared Diamond attempts to explain the factors at play in our history that led to the modern world. In Chapter 9, titled “Zebras, Unhappy Marriages, and the Anna Karenina Principle”, Diamond explores

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    Author of Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Diamond, explains why Eurasians were the peoples to conquer and or exploit present day, less developed countries. The prologue of the book introduces the first exchange between local New Guinean politician, Yali, and Jared Diamond that took place twenty-five years before publishing Guns, Germs, and Steel. Yali then expresses a puzzling question regarding different peoples’ progression and chronological events leading up to the exploitation and colonization

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    Book Summary: Guns, Germs, and Steel starts off with an interesting conversation in the Prologue between the author, Jared Diamond, and a friend he made in New Guinea, a politician named Yali. Yali raises the question that why the rest of the world has so much of what he refers to as “cargo”, or in a broad sense technology, compared to his homeland of New Guinea which becomes the central focus for the entire book. The first chapter begins with the origins of humans and what Diamond calls the “Great

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    Restall versus Diamond: Facts and Myths of the Spanish Conquests In the movie Guns, Germs, and Steel and Matthew Restall’s book Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest, two very different accounts of the early conquests by the Spaniards are uncovered. The movie, which follows Jared Diamond through his studies, presents a more European-centered view, while Restall individually debunks commonly believed myths of the conquest that are perpetuated in the film. In his book, Restall covers seven myths:

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    Ryan Pagano Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies Summaries: The Prologue: A biologist named Jared Diamond was in New Guinea to research the evolution of birds in the area. While on the beach Jared encountered a New Guinean politician named Yali. After walking on the beach having a conversation together Yali asked Jared how people settled in New Guinea over ten thousand years ago but white Europeans took political control over it in the

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    Prologue: Yali's Question Jared Diamond has done much research in New Guinea.  His friend, local New Guinean; Yali, asked why whites had been so successful compared to the locals.  Diamond, while looking into Yali’s question, wants to prove that the differences in success have nothing to do with racial intelligence, but rather environmental differences. He starts with saying that stone people "are on the average probably more intelligent, not less intelligent, than industrialized peoples." He says

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