guns germs and steel essay

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    In Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond, the author gives the list of the ancient fourteen species of big herbivorous domestic mammals and how they affect their regions. Diamond lists the animals in sub-categories on page 152 when he wrote, “Of those Ancient Fourteen, 9 became important livestock for people in only limited areas of the globe: the Arabian camel, Bactrian camel, llama/alpaca, donkey, reindeer, water buffalo, yak, banteng, and gaur. Only 5 species became widespread and important

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    In the documentary Guns, Germs, and Steel, there was a question that was presented to Diamond by a New Guinean man named Yali. Yali asked, "Why do you white people have so much cargo, but we New Guineans have so little?" This question from Yali threw Diamond off. He assumed that since it was a simple question, that there would have been a simple answer. Moreover, Diamond's experience with the New Guineans had showed him their ingenious ways. That they can go into uncharted, undiscovered territory

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    In the book, Guns Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond, the author asks many questions about histories of the world. These question are questions that lie in the main question Jared Diamond is trying to answer. In the Prologue, the author discussed about his personal experience in New Guinea where a local politician asked him the major question "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?” (Diamond 14). When further

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    Immediately after reading the prologue of guns, germs, and steel I was able to comprehend the intended message that the author created. As the book went from chapter to chapter it was understandable that the author strongly believed that one society can excel farther than another based on that society's geography. The author used charts and diagrams to introduce different beliefs and concepts to explain his hypothesis. Some major themes from the beginning to the end of the book that contributed to

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    The quote “nasty, brutish, and short” was originally coined by the philosopher Thomas Hobbes in reference to the lives of the poor, but in the book Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Diamond mentions the phrase as an apt description of the lives led by our ancestors before the dawn of farming (Diamond 2005: 104). Now, make no mistake – the first farmers actually possessed worse nutrition than their hunter-gatherer kin (Diamond 2005: 112), but their sacrifices were quite necessary for the gradual progression

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    Many historical events were created when the Europeans first came to the Americas. The Europeans brought many diseases, animals, new technologies, and their political structures in the Americas, or the New World. In the book Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Diamond states many arguments about these events. This paper will take you through different topics about the Europeans and their culture and agriculture in the Americas. In this paper I will be talking about diseases that came from Europe to Americas

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    Summary In the book, Guns, Germs, and Steel. The Fates of Human Societies, it explain how the world came to be, answering the question of “why wasn’t there any New World diseases that wiped out the Europeans” or “why some societies are still primitive.” According to Diamond, agriculture and domestication allowed humans to have social stability and to specialize. He also explains that a major factor for this global imbalance was the presence of mega-fauna. The Americas’ and Australia’s mega-fauna

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    This book review is on Guns, Germs and Steel, by Jared Diamond. The book was very interesting but a lot of the information could have been cut because it’s a bit too long. Jared Diamond is a scientist, not a historian and he’s American. He upset many historians around the world by the way he bashes Europeans. However, he did win a Pulitzer Prize for the book so that says something. Jared Diamond is a professor of Geography at UCLA and a world traveler. He believes that in the past 13

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    little cargo of our own?’’(Guns, Germs and Steel) This simple question yet so hard to answer was the catalyst, that set Jared Diamond on his guns, germs and steel journey to establishing his hypothesis explaining the major differences between world countries. Why is it that an average person living in the U.S makes approximately $51,939 while in Zambia an average person makes $1,800? This essay, will be explaining the three major elements: Geographic luck, Steel and Germs, that Diamond argues separate

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    Germs, Guns, and Steel is a documentary that exhibiting the research of Jared Diamond in his quest to answer a question that took more than 30 years to answer. In the documentary of Germs, Guns, and Steel, Mr. Diamond was answering the question “Why you white man have so much cargo and we New Guineans have so little?”(“Guns, Germs, and Steel.” PBS. PBS, n.d. Web. 27 Aug. 2015.) from a young man named Yali from a trip to New Guinea years ago. Throughout his research, in effort to answer Yali’s question

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