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Blood germs and steel
Blood germs and steel









blood germs and steel

To start from the beginning, when Diamond was in New Guinea, his friend, Yali, asked, “Why is it that you white people developed so much cargo … but we black people had little cargo of our own?”.

blood germs and steel

He talks about life thousands of years ago, and how people used to live compared to how we live now. After I had read the 6 chapters I had stated before, I went back into the book to see what else could help me with this essay, and I saw a few good points outside of the 6 chapters that helped me to expand on what I thought was the full summary. He had become interested in human societies in July 1972, the time he was studying the evolution of birds in New Guinea. The prologue was like a summary of the book, it describes how the people from Eurasia conquered as much of the world as they did, due not to their genetic features, but their geographic ones. He published what I believe to be one of the most informative novels on the history of human beings. Drawing from his wide-ranging knowledge of drugs, evolutionary life, biology, science, and anthropology, too, too as geography, he surveyed this past of this last 13,000 ages and identified plausible answers to the questions he had posed. “ Why did property and force become distributed as they today exist, rather than in other way? “” Why did human process go in much various rates on different continents? “” Why were Europeans, rather than Africans or Native Americans, The people to be up with guns, that nastiest germs, and metal?” In his award-winning novel, Diamond posited the “unified synthesis” - a unified set concept of history. Diamond presented questions important to the education of human beings.











Blood germs and steel