on Diamond's Guns, Germs Steel
Barkley Rosser (once of pen-l, soon to return) forwards these comments on Jared Diamond's _Guns, Germs Steel_ Remarks on Diamond in light of Devine and DeLong reviews: I think the claim that _Germs, Guns, and Steel_ by Jared Diamond is the greatest work of genius in econ history, or whatever field, of the 1990s is somewhat overdone. Many of its ideas have been around for some time. I would note in particular the book _Plagues and People_ by William O'Neill, 1976, New York: Medallion Press, and the somewhat earlier (sorry, don't have exact pub info, but I first encountered the book in 1966) _Rats, Lice, and History_ by Hans Zinsser, the original classic of this genre, although the latter lacks the grand historical sweep of Diamond. But O'Neill definitely has such sweep and makes many of the points Diamond makes, and others besides, especially about the bubonic plague, originally contracted from wild rats (not domesticated animals) although spread through cities that depended upon reasonably developed ag to exist. What is impressive, correct, possibly even original in Diamond? Mostly the emphasis on the size of Eurasia and the ease of communication throughout it. I think the emphasis on the transmission of disease is way overdone, as I shall discuss below, but the focus on how this led to the diffusion of technology along the silk route and the sea routes, and the economies of scale, etc., kinds of arguments, leading to the guns and steel part of the story, makes a lot of sense. The focus on New Guinea is also original and rather interesting, although this leads to some odd and questionable arguments in the book. In contrast to earlier remarks I made to both Jim and Brad, O'Neill partly agrees with the crop/domesticated big mammal and disease argument that Diamond emphasizes. A key here is to think of the "big three killers," smallpox, flu, and measles, especially in terms of the impact of those diseases when Europeans conquered Austronesia and the Americas, where the resulting epidemics were crucial, as many observers, including [Jim] Blaut, have long noted. Smallpox basically came from cows, flu from pigs, and measles from dogs, although the domestication of dogs occurred prior to crop production and was tied to hunting and herding, but did happen in Eurasia. But, there is a big problem with Diamond's argument and it is Africa. O'Neill and others make it clear that Africa, the likely origin of humanity, has more diseases than anywhere else in the world and many of these came from contact with hunting animals in an non-crop environment. Also, virtually all of the Eurasian origin diseases, such as the "big three" had diffused to Africa at a sufficiently early time so that people there had as much immunity to them as the Eurasians. A sign of this role of Africa is the origin of AIDS, despite the ongoing controversies regarding this matter. The most widely accepted theory is contact with chimpanzees in Africa in a hunting context. I dismiss the "Jewish doctors' plot" and "CIA plot" theories of the origins of AIDS. The most serious charge about European involvement in its initial spread is the recent theory that it got widely spread in Africa as a result of a polio immunization drive that was mismanaged. That theory is deeply contested by some involved in that it, but it is a serious theory. In any case, that theory nevertheless accepts that the ultimate origin was from contact with chimpanzees in a hunting context in Africa, with the spread being due to the botched polio immunization drive in the late 50s that somehow involved tainted chimpanzee blood, allegedly. In any case, I am not nearly as impressed with Diamond's book as some are, although it is quite interesting and provocative. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
Re: on Diamond's Guns, Germs Steel
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/18/00 02:39PMBut, there is a big problem with Diamond's argument and it is Africa. O'Neill and others make it clear that Africa, the likely origin of humanity, has more diseases than anywhere else in the world and many of these came from contact with hunting animals in an non-crop environment. Also, virtually all of the Eurasian origin diseases, such as the "big three" had diffused to Africa at a sufficiently early time so that people there had as much immunity to them as the Eurasians. ___ CB: Yea, that's a wopper of a problem from the reports on the book to this list. - A sign of this role of Africa is the origin of AIDS, despite the ongoing controversies regarding this matter. The most widely accepted theory is contact with chimpanzees in Africa in a hunting context. I dismiss the "Jewish doctors' plot" and "CIA plot" theories of the origins of AIDS. The most serious charge about European involvement in its initial spread is the recent theory that it got widely spread in Africa as a result of a polio immunization drive that was mismanaged. That theory is deeply contested by some involved in that it, but it is a serious theory. In any case, that theory nevertheless accepts that the ultimate origin was from contact with chimpanzees in a hunting context in Africa, with the spread being due to the botched polio immunization drive in the late 50s that somehow involved tainted chimpanzee blood, allegedly. CB: Well, others are saying green monkeys. But the "CIA/MI5" plot is much on the table as Barkley's theory, especially given it may be green monkeys and not chimps. There have been hunting parties there for 10's of thousands of years, but only recently, in that time scale relatively coincident with AIDS popping up, have the CIA been involved in biological warfare and all kinds of nefarious fiddlings with disease. CB
Good review of guns, germs, steel
"Good review"? I, for one, will not trust your friend again on anything! My friend (whose opinion I trust on just about everything) had this to say about the book: Yes, I've actually read the whole book. It's okay in some ways, but his geographical determinism tends to undercut his avowed anti-racist stance--notions of chance (contingency) get lost, so Diamond winds up arguing, in effect, that imperialism is historically inevitable, and that the inhabitants of Europe (whether they had been "white" or not) would have dominated the world anyway. Also, it's so grand in its ambition that historically specific moments come off looking merely like manifestations of general, immutable laws. So much for agency, responsibility, and finally politics, or the notion that anything could have been (could be) different. Yes, he likes the New Guineans. And the Australian aborigines, etc. But then, so do lots of white folks. And liking the oppressed isn't the same thing as understanding/resisting oppression. To me, Diamond's book is another example of the ease with which scientific explanations of human society can make existing relations of power seem natural and irresistible--in his case, as if they're written into the very rocks and soil and coastlines of the continents. To be sure, he seems to have good intentions. But his main point is to show that imperialism isn't a result of racial superiority. Excuse me, but don't we already know that--at least those of us who care?
Re: guns, germs, steel
"Ricardo Duchesne" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/12/00 10:23AM Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". No. They're not. They're Mediterranean--it's really easy for them to trade, fight, and learn from people from all over Eurasia... In quotation marks because Diamond knows that "...the divisions between blacks, whites, and other major groups are arbitrary...", so I, following D, have no objections to your qualification/distinction. But to the impertinent people here who have decided that Diamond is this or that, or is a racist (!), without even reading him, let me cite this CB: It is not impertinent to describe your report of his book as describing a racist concept. When you ( or whomever) says: Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". if he does draw such a line, it is racist line drawing. To draw a line rougly distinguishing "white" Africa from "black" Africa is crudely racist compared with saying that African harbored five of the world's six major division of humanity " . But even the notion of "six major divisions of humanity" is an old, racist anthro concept. There are not "six major divisions of humanity" recognized by modern , physical anthropology. That sounds like Carleton Coon. CB : "But very different peoples may have occupied much of modern black Africa until as recently as a few thousand years ago, and so-called African blacks themselves are heterogeneous. Even before the arrival of white colonialists, *Africa already harbored not just blacks but five of the world's six major divisions of humanity, and three of them are confined as natives to Africa. One quarter of the world's languages are spoken only in Africa. No other continent approaches this human diversity."* Nor is Diamond Eurocentric: "Concealed at the top of Figure 19.2 is our first surprise, a big shock for Eurocentric believers in the superiority of so-called Western civilization. We're taught that Western civilization originated in the Near east, was brought to brilliant heights in Europe by the Greeks and Romans, and produced three of the worl's great religions: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Those religions arose among peoples speaking three closely related languages, termed Semitic languages: Aramic (the language of Christ and the Apostles), Hebrew, and Arabic, respectively. We instinctively associate Semitic peoples with the Near East. *However, Greenberg determined that Semitic languages really form only one of six or more branches of a much larger language family, Afro-asiatic, all of whose other branches (and other 222 surviving languages) are confined to Africa. Even the Semitic subfamily itself is mainly African, 12 of its 19 surviving languages being confined to Ethiopia. This suggests that Afroasiatic languages arose in Africa, and that only one branch of them speard to the Near East. Hence it may have been Africa that gave birth to the languages spoken by the authors of the Old and New Testament and the Koran, the moral pillars of Western civilization"*
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 11:26:58 -0400 From: "Charles Brown" [EMAIL PROTECTED] To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [PEN-L:18012] Re: guns, germs, steel Reply-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] The US being what it is - real paranoia over race - I guess it is better to leave this subject untouched. "Ricardo Duchesne" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/12/00 10:23AM Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". No. They're not. They're Mediterranean--it's really easy for them to trade, fight, and learn from people from all over Eurasia... In quotation marks because Diamond knows that "...the divisions between blacks, whites, and other major groups are arbitrary...", so I, following D, have no objections to your qualification/distinction. But to the impertinent people here who have decided that Diamond is this or that, or is a racist (!), without even reading him, let me cite this CB: It is not impertinent to describe your report of his book as describing a racist concept. When you ( or whomever) says: Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". if he does draw such a line, it is racist line drawing. To draw a line rougly distinguishing "white" Africa from "black" Africa is crudely racist compared with saying that African harbored five of the world's six major division of humanity " . But even the notion of "six major divisions of humanity" is an old, racist anthro concept . There are not "six major divisions of humanity" recognized b modern , physical anthropology. That sounds like Carleton Coon. CB : "But very different peoples may have occupied much of modern black Africa until as recently as a few thousand years ago, and so-called African blacks themselves are heterogeneous. Even before the arrival of white colonialists, *Africa already harbored not just blacks but five of the world's six major divisions of humanity, and three of them are confined as natives to Africa. One quarter of the world's languages are spoken only in Africa. No other continent approaches this human diversity."* Nor is Diamond Eurocentric: "Concealed at the top of Figure 19.2 is our first surprise, a big shock for Eurocentric believers in the superiority of so-called Western civilization. We're taught that Western civilization originated in the Near east, was brought to brilliant heights in Europe by the Greeks and Romans, and produced three of the worl's great religions: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Those religions arose among peoples speaking three closely related languages, termed Semitic languages: Aramic (the language of Christ and the Apostles), Hebrew, and Arabic, respectively. We instinctively associate Semitic peoples with the Near East. *However, Greenberg determined that Semitic languages really form only one of six or more branches of a much larger language family, Afro-asiatic, all of whose other branches (and other 222 surviving languages) are confined to Africa. Even the Semitic subfamily itself is mainly African, 12 of its 19 surviving languages being confined to Ethiopia. This suggests that Afroasiatic languages arose in Africa, and that only one branch of them speard to the Near East. Hence it may have been Africa that gave birth to the languages spoken by the authors of the Old and New Testament and the Koran, the moral pillars of Western civilization"*
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
"Ricardo Duchesne" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/12/00 12:42PM The US being what it is - real paranoia over race - I guess it is better to leave this subject untouched. ___ CB: Paranoia , in the sense of irrational and unfounded fear, is not an accurate way to describe the US on race. What you have in the US is white supremacy or racism ; and the victims of it , people of color, particularly Black and Red are not "paranoid" ,but have wellfounded fears and protests. Logically, therefore, scholars and intellectuals of color militantly critique books, lectures and other intellectual expressions that express and reflect this white supremacy or racism. Even liberal scholars can reflect white supremacy, such that one part of their work is anti-racist, but mixed with it are racist concepts. The dualism of liberals on race is a well-settled phenomenon. CB
Re: Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Logically, therefore, scholars and intellectuals of color militantly critique books, lectures and other intellectual expressions that express and reflect this white supremacy or racism. Even liberal scholars can reflect white supremacy, such that one part of their work is anti-racist, but mixed with it are racist concepts. The dualism of liberals on race is a well-settled phenomenon. CB And when they accuse anti-racist authors *whom* *they* *have* *not* *read* of racism, they look *really* *stupid*... Brad DeLong
Re: guns, germs, steel
And when they accuse anti-racist authors *whom* *they* *have* *not* *read* of racism, they look *really* *stupid*... Brad DeLong Actually, nobody has charged Jared Diamond with racism, only geographical determinism. For that matter the review that Chris Kromm forwarded made the explicit point that Diamond is sympathetic toward stone age type peoples. Louis Proyect (The Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org)
Re: Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Brad De Long [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/12/00 12:33PM Logically, therefore, scholars and intellectuals of color militantly critique books, lectures and other intellectual expressions that express and reflect this white supremacy or racism. Even liberal scholars can reflect white supremacy, such that one part of their work is anti-racist, but mixed with it are racist concepts. The dualism of liberals on race is a well-settled phenomenon. CB And when they accuse anti-racist authors *whom* *they* *have* *not* *read* of racism, they look *really* *stupid*... __ CB: And when "they" say : "And when they accuse anti-racist authors *whom* *they* *have* *not* *read* of racism, they look *really* *stupid*..." They look really (*^%$(+#@ and not capable of judging us as stupid ; nor do "they" have a good record on these lists of judging who is anti-racist and who is not. In fact when "they" say someone is anti-racist, I get suspicious, as would Henry Liu and Jim Craven and... and... In other words, you don't have good judgment about who and what are and are not racist. And if the statement Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". if accurate, is a racist line drawing. CB
Re: Good review of guns, germs, steel
Nice hit-and-run job. Don't suppose you'd actually take the time to defend your comment? CK - Original Message - From: Ricardo Duchesne [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, April 12, 2000 10:31 AM Subject: [PEN-L:18004] Good review of "guns, germs, steel" "Good review"? I, for one, will not trust your friend again on anything! My friend (whose opinion I trust on just about everything) had this to say about the book: Yes, I've actually read the whole book. It's okay in some ways, but his geographical determinism tends to undercut his avowed anti-racist stance--notions of chance (contingency) get lost, so Diamond winds up arguing, in effect, that imperialism is historically inevitable, and that the inhabitants of Europe (whether they had been "white" or not) would have dominated the world anyway. Also, it's so grand in its ambition that historically specific moments come off looking merely like manifestations of general, immutable laws. So much for agency, responsibility, and finally politics, or the notion that anything could have been (could be) different. Yes, he likes the New Guineans. And the Australian aborigines, etc. But then, so do lots of white folks. And liking the oppressed isn't the same thing as understanding/resisting oppression. To me, Diamond's book is another example of the ease with which scientific explanations of human society can make existing relations of power seem natural and irresistible--in his case, as if they're written into the very rocks and soil and coastlines of the continents. To be sure, he seems to have good intentions. But his main point is to show that imperialism isn't a result of racial superiority. Excuse me, but don't we already know that--at least those of us who care?
Good review of guns, germs, steel
Look, what your best friend is supposed to have said is not even a "review", but a silly emotional reaction about agency, or whatever he thinks that term means. And yes, in response to your personal e-mail, waking up to another snow fall in mid-April leaves me with little patience for a stupid review. Nice hit-and-run job. Don't suppose you'd actually take the time to defend your comment? CK - Original Message - From: Ricardo Duchesne [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, April 12, 2000 10:31 AM Subject: [PEN-L:18004] Good review of "guns, germs, steel" "Good review"? I, for one, will not trust your friend again on anything! My friend (whose opinion I trust on just about everything) had this to say about the book: Yes, I've actually read the whole book. It's okay in some ways, but his geographical determinism tends to undercut his avowed anti-racist stance--notions of chance (contingency) get lost, so Diamond winds up arguing, in effect, that imperialism is historically inevitable, and that the inhabitants of Europe (whether they had been "white" or not) would have dominated the world anyway. Also, it's so grand in its ambition that historically specific moments come off looking merely like manifestations of general, immutable laws. So much for agency, responsibility, and finally politics, or the notion that anything could have been (could be) different. Yes, he likes the New Guineans. And the Australian aborigines, etc. But then, so do lots of white folks. And liking the oppressed isn't the same thing as understanding/resisting oppression. To me, Diamond's book is another example of the ease with which scientific explanations of human society can make existing relations of power seem natural and irresistible--in his case, as if they're written into the very rocks and soil and coastlines of the continents. To be sure, he seems to have good intentions. But his main point is to show that imperialism isn't a result of racial superiority. Excuse me, but don't we already know that--at least those of us who care?
Re: Re: Good review of guns, germs, steel
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You wrote: Who is You? Carrol
Re: Re: Good review of guns, germs, steel
Paul quotes someone from off the list: Also, it's [Diamond's book is] so grand in its ambition that historically specific moments come off looking merely like manifestations of general, immutable laws. So much for agency, responsibility, and finally politics, or the notion that anything could have been (could be) different. and adds: It has always seemed to me to be a socialist fundamental that people make themselves, as Marx says, not necessarily in conditions of their own making. This kind of biological/geographic determinism I find to be contrary to human agency and human will and therefore of the genus of Eugenics and fascism. Diamond's geographic determinism -- which is not a biological determinism really -- is not totally deterministic except at a very abstract level over long periods of time. Further, it doesn't apply to the era after 1500 or so. There is only one race, the human race For what it's worth, Diamond would agree that there's only one race. Though genetic variation plays a role in his theory (mostly, it's a matter of resistance to disease), for him the most important differences are cultural and technological. Ethnic divisions within it are cultural, not genetic. Human experience is conditioned by geography, climate, the availability of resources, the social and economic institutions both within and without the local cultures -- ie. by conditions not of our making. Diamond would agree. I can not believe that any socialist could take socio-biology seriously given this context. Diamond is not a sociobiologist. This is especially true because he recognizes that cultural and technological change have replaced genetic change as the main dynamics of human "evolution" (something that anthropologists have known for decades). Sociobiologists think that analogies between ants and people are somehow revealing. Diamond does not. It seems to me that if one is interested in filling the gaps in historical materialism (say, in Engels' book on the origins of the state, etc.), one has to avoid an instinctual repugnance for non-Marxian research. (I guess Louis Proyect sees Engels' book and the like as complete, so that such research is "banal.") That doesn't mean that one should accept Diamond's work (or any other) uncritically, though. That's why my review was not only adulatory but critical. Look, Diamond is a liberal, not a radical, Marxist, or socialist. But that doesn't mean we should reject his research _tout court_. If so, we'd have to reject Keynes and the Canadian nationalists, too. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~JDevine/JDevine.html
guns, germs, steel
Jim Devine wrote: The fact that the Europeans conquered Africa and Asia ( which had had agriculture and the diseases you mention), as well as America ( the Central Americans and Peruvian/Colombian etc. Indians had agriculture too) seems to imply that there was something beyond agriculture and diseases that differentiated the Europeans from all the rest in the last 500 years. He argues that because of the ecological/geographical disunity of the Americas (mostly because of the North-South axis), the opportunities for developing a variety of different seeds was higher in Eurasia. Having more variety, there's a better chance of getting really good crops. I haven't read Diamond but his theory, if one can call it that, seems like a more sophistacted variant of the old Euro-centric theories that Europe advanced over the rest of the world because Africa and Asia lacked the physical resources necessary to build capitalist civilization e.g. tropical soils are inferior hence lower productivity agriculture, arid cultures require irrigation and such societies are necessarily stagnant. But other climates are not necessarrily inferior though they are different. There seems nothing new about Diamond. William Mcneil in his *Plagues and Peoples* defends the idea that mass demographic disasters are the prime mover in social change. For example, he argues that the black plague diffused out of inner China into central Asia and finally into Western Europe. The mass die off created a labor shortage that greatly strengthed the hand of the the Eurpean yeomanry in their struggle against the upper classes.(Brenner?) Further, Diamond seems to fall into the trap of using China as a test case for a theory about Europe. In assessing why China and other societies lacked dynamism and failed to develop,he is offering a theory about Europe yet what makes China China and Africa Africa cannot be learned from a theory about Europe. These societies need to be explained in their own right as Mao (ReporT From Hunan) and Mariategui (Seven Theses on Peru)realized early on. As for defences against disease, that is a matter of natural selection and played one of the primary causal roles in the destruction and conquest of indigenous cultures by Europeans though the spread of diseases was more often unconscious than conscious. The Europeans didn't want to destroy the natives(which they ended up doing), they needed christian converts and cheap labor. On a more abstract level, Diamond's ideas bear a prima facie similarity to a type of historical materialism defended by Alan Carling built on an analogy to natural selection (i don't think actual natural selection plays a role in Carling)where societies with lower development of productive forces are selected out by societies with higher development of pf's through a variety of causal mechanisms like superior weapons. I wonder of Diamond has read Carling. Sam Pawlett
Re: guns, germs, steel
Sam Pawlett wrote: On a more abstract level, Diamond's ideas bear a prima facie similarity to a type of historical materialism defended by Alan Carling built on an analogy to natural selection (i don't think actual natural selection plays a role in Carling)where societies with lower development of productive forces are selected out by societies with higher development of pf's through a variety of causal mechanisms like superior weapons. I wonder of Diamond has read Carling. I forgot to add that the Carling theory seems to beg the question since some societies have a higher level of pf's because they select out others without explaining how theses socities became that way in the first place. Sam Pawlett
Re: guns, germs, steel
Sam P. writes: I haven't read Diamond but his theory, if one can call it that, seems like a more sophistacted variant of the old Euro-centric theories that Europe advanced over the rest of the world because Africa and Asia lacked the physical resources necessary to build capitalist civilization e.g. tropical soils are inferior hence lower productivity agriculture, arid cultures require irrigation and such societies are necessarily stagnant. But other climates are not necessarrily inferior though they are different. Yeah, but his work takes into account a hell of a lot of research that's been done since the old theories were developed. It's more complete and more sophisticated. Also, I don't see why a theory that points to the role of geography is inherently Eurocentric. As I said in my original review, Diamond makes a big effort not to be Eurocentric (though of course some leaks in). The fact that his theory of the Eurasian conquest ends up being similar to that of the rabbits taking over their ecological niche in Australia (but much bloodier and nastier) does not make the conquerors look very good. There seems nothing new about Diamond. William Mcneil in his *Plagues and Peoples* defends the idea that mass demographic disasters are the prime mover in social change. For example, he argues that the black plague diffused out of inner China into central Asia and finally into Western Europe. The mass die off created a labor shortage that greatly strengthed the hand of the the Eurpean yeomanry in their struggle against the upper classes.(Brenner?) As I noted in my original review, Diamond is a synthesist. He cites Mcneil and similar sources. Further, Diamond seems to fall into the trap of using China as a test case for a theory about Europe. In assessing why China and other societies lacked dynamism and failed to develop, he is offering a theory about Europe yet what makes China China and Africa Africa cannot be learned from a theory about Europe. These societies need to be explained in their own right as Mao (ReporT From Hunan) and Mariategui (Seven Theses on Peru)realized early on. As I've said several times, he really doesn't spend much time on the issue of why Europe beat China (since his emphasis is on why Eurasia as a whole -- which for him includes North Africa -- beat the rest of the world). But when he does, he tries to apply his more general theory, which is not derived from studying Europe. Rather, it's from ecology, genetics, and evolutionary biology, with some anthropology. Also, he does study China. However, as a Grand Synthesist, his results are probably seen as superficial by those who are experts on China. As I noted, his story of "why Europe won" isn't very satisfactory. As for defences against disease, that is a matter of natural selection and played one of the primary causal roles in the destruction and conquest of indigenous cultures by Europeans though the spread of diseases was more often unconscious than conscious. The Europeans didn't want to destroy the natives (which they ended up doing), they needed christian converts and cheap labor. Diamond is conscious of the conscious effort to utilize the Native Americans' lack of immunity to the "crowd diseases" of the Old World, as with the use of smallpox-infected blankets. My reading suggests that he's right that the results of the European invasion of the New World weren't planned ahead of time. Not only didn't the Europeans not want to kill off a potential slave labor force, but they shot themselves in the feet (in the long run) by destroying infrastructure such as the Inca irrigation systems. On a more abstract level, Diamond's ideas bear a prima facie similarity to a type of historical materialism defended by Alan Carling built on an analogy to natural selection (i don't think actual natural selection plays a role in Carling) where societies with lower development of productive forces are selected out by societies with higher development of pf's through a variety of causal mechanisms like superior weapons. I wonder of Diamond has read Carling. It's hard to tell, since Diamond doesn't have a bibliography, forcing us to slog through a bibliographical essay. Diamond's theory is similar, but then again, at least as you describe it, Carling's theory doesn't seem very original. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Sam Pawlett wrote: I forgot to add that the Carling theory seems to beg the question since some societies have a higher level of pf's [productive forces] because they select out others without explaining how theses socities became that way in the first place. Diamond initially explains why some countries have a higher level of productive forces in terms of the plants and animals available, the geography, the climate, etc. (He does not emphasize the role of genetic differences between peoples (except for the role of resistance to diseases) or even cultural differences. Some cultures are more open to technical progress, but he treats this as a random variable. He presumes that all individual humans are basically the same in terms of seeking ways to improve their lives.) He then sees advantages as accumulating (as when the shift from hunting gathering to food production then encourages the improvement of farming). It should be stressed that in Diamond's work, the concept of "higher level of productive forces" does not appear. If he had used that term, "higher" would have been defined in terms of allowing a group to spread, grow in population, and conquer others. As I noted in my original review (available at http://clawww.lmu.edu/~JDevine/notes/gunsreview.html), technical progress is implicitly defined in similar terms. That seems inadequate. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
Re: guns, germs, steel
I dont know if this is a work of "total genius" but it is certainly a masterful explanation for the differing patterns of development of the continents of the world. But what is so troubling for many in the left about this book is that it proves beyond a doubt that Africa's backwardness was a result of its ecology - i.e., lack of domesticable animals among other things - and not some mythical "underdevelopment" process. Diamond shows this without ever engaging with WS theory. But I can tell you that Wallerstein and others have been very silent about this book, since they know it is not "eurocentric" but is in fact written as a critique of racist interpretations. It is also scientifically convincing. Jim Devine says: One thing that is clear from the beginning is that Diamond, despite his origins and his residence (here in L.A.), makes a big effort to avoid Eurocentrism. In a strange way, he comes off "New Guinea" centric instead, even asserting that he thinks the residents of the New Guinea highlands are superior to us White Americans. I dont think one has to take this remark about the superiority of New Guiineans literally; Diamond is just playing with the idea: 'if you want to argue that Europeans are superior because of this and that trait or achievement, well, let me tell you that New Guineans look pretty smart when you consider this and that trait behavior of theirs' but that's all, nothing serious. Jim: And as Brad says, the book really doesn't explain why those from Europe have dominated the rest of Eurasia during the last 500+ years. Diamond's focus is on broadly defined ecological zones (roughly, continents). For example, he defines Eurasia as including North Africa. His time scale is even broader, dealing with the 13,000-year time period before 1600 C.E. (A.D.) or so. Yes, Diamand explains well why Euroasia developed faster than every other continent of the world, but once he gets to the question of why Europe was the only area within Eurasia that industrialized, his argument starts to breakdown. Which is understandable since this is not his area, it also covers only a chapter or two of the book. The ecological approach works better for pre-1500 world history, but not after that date. Jim: . This is the beginning of his incomplete discussion of why Europe won out in the competition amongst all the Eurasian subregions. Within the context of his framework, however, one could easily say that Europe just happened to be _lucky_, to conquer most of Eurasia before some part of the rest of Eurasian conquered it, especially given the advantage of being relatively close to the New World (which in his framework was destined to be conquered by _some_ part of Eurasia). If Europe had been further from the Americas, perhaps a continent-wide empire could have been solidified which ended intra-European competition, so that non-Europeans could have won. A major problem with Diamond is the lack of attention given to the massive literature that already exists on this subject. He wrongly thinks that a natural scientific focus will also work to explain continental differences after 1500 (actually his explanation of the rise of civilization is also limited for the same reason, including other logical flaws - like his argument that competition among chiefdoms eventually led to the rise of state/civilization, which fails to address the fact that in many areas of the world chiefdoms were competing endlessly with no state ever coming into shape.) Again, I think a major flaw in his book is his refusal to learn/acknowldge the many other scholars who have investigated this set of questions and from whom he could have learned a lot more, but he really wants to say that everything he says is uniquely his own. ) But Diamond doesn't tell us what type of unit it is that is competing. Families, extended or otherwise? or individuals? I guess it makes sense to leave this vague, because human organization has changed so much over the millennia. It's good that he doesn't focus on individuals, the way economists do, since it's only recently (in his time frame) that individualism has become dominant. I think his unit of analysis is individuals struggling to survive within a particular ecological niche; individuals who are quite "practical" in that they know how best to augment their chances of survival. Moreover, individuals who tend to conflict with other individuals, conflicts which will intensify as populations densities increase, and which will thus require the formation of central authorities to deal with those tensions, and other economic problems that arise witht growing wealth and stratification. But he really never tells us why individuals engage in war; in fact, war is a crucial dynamic in his whole explanation of the rise of states (and of many other questins he tries to answer like how Africa became
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Ricardo writes: I dont know if this is a work of "total genius" but it is certainly a masterful explanation for the differing patterns of development of the continents of the world. But what is so troubling for many in the left about this book is that it proves beyond a doubt that Africa's backwardness was a result of its ecology - i.e., lack of domesticable animals among other things - and not some mythical "underdevelopment" process. I don't see Diamond's book as contradicting the "underdevelopment of underdevelopment" theory. He only deals with the issue of why Eurasia got the initial advantage over Africa. After that advantage arises, then the "U of U" process takes place. Wallerstein and Diamond can reach a compromise, though I doubt that A.G. Frank and Diamond could do so. I dont think one has to take this remark about the superiority of New Guiineans literally; Diamond is just playing with the idea: 'if you want to argue that Europeans are superior because of this and that trait or achievement, well, let me tell you that New Guineans look pretty smart when you consider this and that trait behavior of theirs' but that's all, nothing serious. I didn't take it seriously. I thought he was "bending the stick" to contradict the bias of his readers. Yes, Diamand explains well why Euroasia developed faster than every other continent of the world, but once he gets to the question of why Europe was the only area within Eurasia that industrialized, his argument starts to breakdown. Which is understandable since this is not his area, it also covers only a chapter or two of the book. The ecological approach works better for pre-1500 world history, but not after that date. yup. The rise of industrialization is treated simply as a "natural" outcome of the rise of farming (food production). I wrote: This is the beginning of his incomplete discussion of why Europe won out in the competition amongst all the Eurasian subregions. Within the context of his framework, however, one could easily say that Europe just happened to be _lucky_, to conquer most of Eurasia before some part of the rest of Eurasian conquered it, especially given the advantage of being relatively close to the New World (which in his framework was destined to be conquered by _some_ part of Eurasia). If Europe had been further from the Americas, perhaps a continent-wide empire could have been solidified which ended intra-European competition, so that non-Europeans could have won. Ricardo: A major problem with Diamond is the lack of attention given to the massive literature that already exists on this subject. He wrongly thinks that a natural scientific focus will also work to explain continental differences after 1500 (actually his explanation of the rise of civilization is also limited for the same reason, including other logical flaws - like his argument that competition among chiefdoms eventually led to the rise of state/civilization, which fails to address the fact that in many areas of the world chiefdoms were competing endlessly with no state ever coming into shape.) Again, I think a major flaw in his book is his refusal to learn/acknowldge the many other scholars who have investigated this set of questions and from whom he could have learned a lot more, but he really wants to say that everything he says is uniquely his own. I think it was a good idea for him to limit the scope of his book. If he'd tried to get farther beyond 1500, the book would have been much much longer, to its detriment. BTW, he talks a lot about the persistence of "backward" situations (here, the existence of chiefdoms) even though full-scale states had arisen. He doesn't posit some sort of theory of automatic "progress." In fact, one of the strong points of this theory is that he explains "regression." Isolated areas can remain "backward." ... really never tells us why individuals engage in war; in fact, war is a crucial dynamic in his whole explanation of the rise of states (and of many other questins he tries to answer like how Africa became black, and China became Chinese). This is where his tacit Malthusianism comes in. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
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Once every couple of weeks I play chess with John and Jeffrey. Jeffrey is a long-time Nation subscriber and John, a lawyer by profession, is the kind of New Yorker who voted for Giuliani. I usually let the two of them argue politics since the gap between John and me is too wide to allow civil debate. A couple of weeks ago, against my better judgement, I attempted to explain to him why the Kennewick Man's bones should stay out of the hands of "scientists". John has a tremendous ability to ferret out books that answer his 'bete noires', Afrocentrists, left-liberals like Jeffrey and anybody else who thinks that white society is responsible for black peoples' woes. He snapped up Jim Sleeper's "Liberal Racism" while the ink was still wet and has committed Mary Lefkowitz's screed against Martin Bernal to memory. As soon as it came out, he began waving Jared Diamond's book in our face. "See," he shouted, "we had nothing to do with black people's suffering." I do know that Jim Blaut makes a few dismissive comments in Diamond's direction. Myself, I have yet to see anything in the reviews that would make me want to delve into his book. I first stumbled across Diamond about ten years ago, when reviews portrayed him as a sociobiologist in the Robert Ardrey mold. Here's one to give you a flavor for how he was perceived in the press. I am just not motivated to read these characters, who seem to be a subspecies of social Darwinism. Financial Times (London) June 1, 1991, Saturday Books; A 'Naked Ape' for grown-ups By ANDREW CLEMENTS THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD CHIMPANZEE by Jared Diamond Radius Pounds 16.99, 360 pages A NAKED Ape for grown-ups, Jared Diamond's fascinating examination of Homo sapiens as large mammal delves into all those areas of human behaviour that Desmond Morris exposed so titillatingly to public gaze 25 years ago. Human socio-biology has come a long way since then and Diamond, a physiologist by training and ornithologist by parallel career, has laced its disparate strands into a fascinating portrait with more than enough uncomfortable facts to stop any dinner-party conversation right in its tracks. To a disinterested observer from another planet, he reminds us, humanity would be classified as just another large ape, a very close cousin to the chimpanzees. We share more than 98 per cent of our genes with the two chimp species, giving a closer correlation than between birds like the Chiffchaff and Willow Warbler that are indistinguishable to the casual observer. But that extra two per cent has made all the difference, and has been responsible for everything that stems from our upright posture, larger brains and strange sex and social lives. Those behavioural differences, Diamond argues, have been at least as important as sheer brain capacity in lifting us above our congeners. (clip) Louis Proyect (The Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org)
Re: guns, germs, steel
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/09/00 04:46PM (book review) ___- CB: Thanks for this book review, Jim. I was a little unclear. At first it seemed you were saying that the author was explaining the conquests of the last 500 years. Then there seems to be discussion going back to the origin of agriculture , which is 7,000 years ago or so. Anyway, this list had a very rich debate on the cause of European conquest over the last 500 years, as you know. It would be hard to explain it as geographical. But I may not have understood the author's argument in the book. Geographical determinism is a bit tricky. It gets tricky to make a causal link between geography and a "conquering" mentality or cultural value. You probably know that there have been ecological schools in anthropology and archeology for a long time ( You mention Childe and Carneiro ;See the reader _Prehistoric Agriculture_ edited by Stuart Struever, or Ecological Anthropology edited by Yehudi Cohen). Anthropologists/Archeologists might be defending their turf , as you mention, but on the other hand , as you say, the topic you summarize is not at all a new subject for anthro/archeo. There is a logical link between agriculture and exploiting classes, because agriculture produces surpluses and non-productive classes are based on surpluses. Why does he say "Eurasians" and not "Europeans" conquered the Western Hemisphere ? The fact that the Europeans conquered Africa and Asia ( which had had agriculture and the diseases you mention), as well as America ( the Central Americans and Peruvian/Colombian etc. Indians had agriculture too) seems to imply that there was something beyond agriculture and diseases that differentiated the Europeans from all the rest in the last 500 years. And before the last 500 years the Europeans were not dominant. Anyway, thanks for sharing your reading. CB
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What I got from the Diamond book was not The Naked Ape, but more of an environmental history. The European/Asian regions that developed had access to large draft animals and easily harvested seeds. Close proximity to the large mammals created diseases for which these people had immunity, making conquest easier. Nonetheless, he allows for culture. The best example, which Jim already mentioned, was the Japanese who developed sophisticated firearms and then outlawed them. Nonetheless, the emphasis on military equipment and genetics could lead to the misreading by Lou's chess buddy. -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University [EMAIL PROTECTED] Chico, CA 95929 530-898-5321 fax 530-898-5901
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Quoth Louis P: As soon as it came out, he began waving Jared Diamond's book in our face. "See," he shouted, "we had nothing to do with black people's suffering." His interpretation of the book is wrong. It sounds like he hadn't read the book. It's always a big mistake to praise (or, for that matter, dismiss) a book without reading it. It's the Bob Dole style of reviewing. I do know that Jim Blaut makes a few dismissive comments in Diamond's direction. what were they? are they valid? I am just not motivated to read these characters, who seem to be a subspecies of social Darwinism. I don't know about Diamond's previous book(s), but _Guns, Germs, and Steel_ is not social Darwinism, since Eurasian "superiority" is only in terms of "might makes right" and acquired immunities. He does reject the good guys vs. bad guys interpretation of history. Louis quotes a FINANCIAL TIMES review of Diamond's "Third Chimp" book: To a disinterested observer from another planet, he reminds us, humanity would be classified as just another large ape, a very close cousin to the chimpanzees. We share more than 98 per cent of our genes with the two chimp species, giving a closer correlation than between birds like the Chiffchaff and Willow Warbler that are indistinguishable to the casual observer. But that extra two per cent has made all the difference, and has been responsible for everything that stems from our upright posture, larger brains and strange sex and social lives. Those behavioural differences, Diamond argues, have been at least as important as sheer brain capacity in lifting us above our congeners. It would be interesting to compare Diamond's perspective with that of Engels on the transition from ape to human. Engels, if I remember correctly, embraced the then-popular Lamarckian theory of evolution (since he didn't know about Gregor Mendel's work). But otherwise Engels' manuscript (which Stephen J. Gould says is pretty good once you get past the Lamarckism) doesn't seem to contradict Diamond as sketched above. Is there an expert in the house? Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
guns, germs, steel
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/10/00 12:44PM Louis quotes a FINANCIAL TIMES review of Diamond's "Third Chimp" book: To a disinterested observer from another planet, he reminds us, humanity would be classified as just another large ape, a very close cousin to the chimpanzees. We share more than 98 per cent of our genes with the two chimp species, giving a closer correlation than between birds like the Chiffchaff and Willow Warbler that are indistinguishable to the casual observer. But that extra two per cent has made all the difference, and has been responsible for everything that stems from our upright posture, larger brains and strange sex and social lives. Those behavioural differences, Diamond argues, have been at least as important as sheer brain capacity in lifting us above our congeners. It would be interesting to compare Diamond's perspective with that of Engels on the transition from ape to human. Engels, if I remember correctly, embraced the then-popular Lamarckian theory of evolution (since he didn't know about Gregor Mendel's work). But otherwise Engels' manuscript (which Stephen J. Gould says is pretty good once you get past the Lamarckism) doesn't seem to contradict Diamond as sketched above. Is there an expert in the house? _ CB: Engels is famous for emphasizing the role of labor in the transition. Actually, I think our use of symbols and language, keys to our expanded sociality, including extended to dead generations, is the key leap in humans. The important thing about our labor is it enormous sociality or communality. The leap for humans is that we are communists compared with apes. In what sense do we have strange sex lives, and how is that "important" ? Our social lives are "different" than other species, but "strange" is a somewhat strange way to describe that. It is the enormity of our social (socio-HISTORICAL ) lives that is important in making us different than other species. CB
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
I dont know if this is a work of "total genius" but it is certainly a masterful explanation for the differing patterns of development of the continents of the world. But what is so troubling for many in the left about this book is that it proves beyond a doubt that Africa's backwardness was a result of its ecology - i.e., lack of domesticable animals among other things - and not some mythical "underdevelopment" process. Diamond's argument is that ecology and distance explain Africans' relatively poor command over technology as of 1500. The underdevelopment comes later, with the triangle trade and its effect on west Africa. And this has always been the part of Diamond's argument that I have had the most doubts about. East Africa seems to me at least to have been part of the Eurasian ekumene--why else would the largest city on the east African coast, the House of Peace, have a name from a language whose heartland is two thousand miles north? Brad DeLong
guns, germs, steel
I don't know, West Africa was "more advanced" than Europe during the European Middle Ages, the 500 years before 1500. The ecology didn't change in the interim. I tend to think of Europe's leap forward over the rest of the world (not just Africa) in the last 500 years, as an expression of a sort of law of evolutionary potential ( "the last shall be first"). The idea is that the area that is most backward in one period has the most potential to leap forward in the next period because when you at the bottom of the heap you are more open to change, whereas when you are on top you cling to the status quo. CB Brad De Long [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/10/00 12:34PM I dont know if this is a work of "total genius" but it is certainly a masterful explanation for the differing patterns of development of the continents of the world. But what is so troubling for many in the left about this book is that it proves beyond a doubt that Africa's backwardness was a result of its ecology - i.e., lack of domesticable animals among other things - and not some mythical "underdevelopment" process. Diamond's argument is that ecology and distance explain Africans' relatively poor command over technology as of 1500. The underdevelopment comes later, with the triangle trade and its effect on west Africa. And this has always been the part of Diamond's argument that I have had the most doubts about. East Africa seems to me at least to have been part of the Eurasian ekumene--why else would the largest city on the east African coast, the House of Peace, have a name from a language whose heartland is two thousand miles north? Brad DeLong
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I do know that Jim Blaut makes a few dismissive comments in Diamond's direction. Myself, I have yet to see anything in the reviews that would make me want to delve into his book. I first stumbled across Diamond about ten years ago, when reviews portrayed him as a sociobiologist in the Robert Ardrey mold. Here's one to give you a flavor for how he was perceived in the press. I am just not motivated to read these characters, who seem to be a subspecies of social Darwinism. Well, you are wrong. That ain't Diamond... Brad DeLong
Re: guns, germs, steel
I don't know, West Africa was "more advanced" than Europe during the European Middle Ages, the 500 years before 1500. The ecology didn't change in the interim. I tend to think of Europe's leap forward over the rest of the world (not just Africa) in the last 500 years, as an expression of a sort of law of evolutionary potential ( "the last shall be first"). The idea is that the area that is most backward in one period has the most potential to leap forward in the next period because when you at the bottom of the heap you are more open to change, whereas when you are on top you cling to the status quo. CB Interesting idea Ken Pomeranz's _The Great Divergence_ develops it to some degree--that the very *success* of India and China at mobilizing resources gave them large populations, and that Europe's earlier lack of success at mobilizing resources gave at an extra edge of free resources that helped propel it forward in the early modern period... Brad DeLong
Re: guns, germs, steel
I dont know if this is a work of "total genius" but it is certainly a masterful explanation for the differing patterns of development of the continents of the world. But what is so troubling for many in the left about this book is that it proves beyond a doubt that Africa's backwardness was a result of its ecology - i.e., lack of domesticable animals among other things - and not some mythical "underdevelopment" process. Diamond's argument is that ecology and distance explain Africans' relatively poor command over technology as of 1500. The underdevelopment comes later, with the triangle trade and its effect on west Africa. I still think his argument is, by implication, a direct challege to dependency theory, eventhough he never refers to this word; and he certainly does not say that a process of "underdevelopment" occurs in Africa after 1500. He is very emphatic that the "ULTIMATE" causes of Europe's technological and political superiority lie in its ecological/geographical conditions. And this has always been the part of Diamond's argument that I have had the most doubts about. East Africa seems to me at least to have been part of the Eurasian ekumene--why else would the largest city on the east African coast, the House of Peace, have a name from a language whose heartland is two thousand miles north? Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. Brad DeLong
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
the east African coast, the House of Peace, have a name from a language whose heartland is two thousand miles north? Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. Why isn't Dar-es-Salaam considered part of Black Africa? For that matter, what constitutes Black Africa? I think it might make sense to distinguish Subsaharan Africa from North Africa, but from a socioeconomic perspective Dar-es-Salaam and Timbuktu certainly can be grouped together. More relevant to the question under consideration is what happened to places like Timbuktu or Dar-es-Salaam historically. While they were not as central to world trade as Kalkut or Malacca, neither could they be accurately described as "backward". After visiting Timbuktu in 1352, Abu Ibn Battuta wrote in his "Book of Travels", "There is complete security in their country. Neither traveler nor inhabitant in it has anything to fear from robbers or men of violence." Two centuries later, a Spanish Moor, Wazzan Zayyati -- known by the pen name Leo Africanus -- praised the city as a haven for "a great store of doctors, judges, priests and other learned men that are bountifully maintained at the king's expense." Timbuktu's scholars taught thousands of students and maintained large private libraries. That era ended in 1591, when a Moroccan army destroyed Songhai, the empire that housed Timbuktu. Portuguese navigators accelerated its descent into poverty by destroying the city's commercial viability, in much the same manner as Great Britain did in India after the Battle of Plessy. Timbuktu's fall was about conquest by human beings, not germs. Louis Proyect (The Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org)
Re: guns, germs, steel
"Ricardo Duchesne" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/10/00 03:42PM I still think his argument is, by implication, a direct challege to dependency theory, eventhough he never refers to this word; and he certainly does not say that a process of "underdevelopment" occurs in Africa after 1500. He is very emphatic that the "ULTIMATE" causes of Europe's technological and political superiority lie in its ecological/geographical conditions. And this has always been the part of Diamond's argument that I have had the most doubts about. East Africa seems to me at least to have been part of the Eurasian ekumene--why else would the largest city on the east African coast, the House of Peace, have a name from a language whose heartland is two thousand miles north? Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. __ CB: What does being BLACK Africa have to do with "ecological/geographical conditions" ? Sounds like Diamond has an inconsistent and racist theory. CB
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CB: Thanks for this book review, Jim. you're welcome I was a little unclear. At first it seemed you were saying that the author was explaining the conquests of the last 500 years. Then there seems to be discussion going back to the origin of agriculture , which is 7,000 years ago or so. Anyway, this list had a very rich debate on the cause of European conquest over the last 500 years, as you know. It would be hard to explain it as geographical. But I may not have understood the author's argument in the book. To Diamond, the conquests of the last 500 years ago arose because Eurasia (especially Europe) gained its advantage in the previous 7,000 years or so. So Europe could then accumulate advantages at Africa's expense (the development of underdevelopment). As I said, there's not really a contradiction between Diamond (whose emphasis is before 1500) and people like Wallerstein (whose emphasis is after 1500). But obviously, they'd have to go to a counsellor to make the marriage work... Geographical determinism is a bit tricky. It gets tricky to make a causal link between geography and a "conquering" mentality or cultural value. You probably know that there have been ecological schools in anthropology and archeology for a long time ( You mention Childe and Carneiro ;See the reader _Prehistoric Agriculture_ edited by Stuart Struever, or Ecological Anthropology edited by Yehudi Cohen). Anthropologists/Archeologists might be defending their turf , as you mention, but on the other hand , as you say, the topic you summarize is not at all a new subject for anthro/archeo. right. Marvin Harris, one of my favorite reads in the subject, is an ecological anthro-type (with a much greater emphasis on culture than Diamond). I don't think Diamond explains the "conquering mentality." The expansionary drive is _assumed_ as part of his tacit Malthusianism, i.e., that a successful society tends to have too many children, so that it looks for new lands to conquer (along with improvements in technology and organization). To me, Malthusianism goes out the window as even a partly valid theory with the agricultural revolutions that preceded the industrial revolutions of the 19th century in Europe. But the establishment of capitalism in Western Europe created a new kind of expansionary -- conquering -- drive. There is a logical link between agriculture and exploiting classes, because agriculture produces surpluses and non-productive classes are based on surpluses. Diamond agrees. Why does he say "Eurasians" and not "Europeans" conquered the Western Hemisphere ? ... And before the last 500 years the Europeans were not dominant. His theory only explains the Eurasian ascendancy. He has a very incomplete explanation of why the Europeans were on the cutting edge of that ascendancy in 1500. That's not really what his book is about. The discussion of Europe comes only in the epilogue. The fact that the Europeans conquered Africa and Asia ( which had had agriculture and the diseases you mention), as well as America ( the Central Americans and Peruvian/Colombian etc. Indians had agriculture too) seems to imply that there was something beyond agriculture and diseases that differentiated the Europeans from all the rest in the last 500 years. He argues that because of the ecological/geographical disunity of the Americas (mostly because of the North-South axis), the opportunities for developing a variety of different seeds was higher in Eurasia. Having more variety, there's a better chance of getting really good crops. This disunity also meant that maize took a really long time to spread from Mexico to what is now the Eastern U.S. More fundamentally, the Americas had fewer animals that were useful. And communication was hard going North to South: as he said, the Aztecs had wheels, but they remained toys because they had no animals to pull the carts. The Incas had such animals (llamas, alpacas), but didn't communicate at all with the Aztecs. Even so, llamas seem inferior as beasts of burden to horses or oxen. Europe didn't totally conquer Asia (cf. China, Thailand, Japan). And it only conquered the central part of Africa after the rise of modern medicine, which created a way to fight tropical diseases. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
Re: guns, germs, steel
Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. __ CB: What does being BLACK Africa have to do with "ecological/geographical conditions" ? Sounds like Diamond has an inconsistent and racist theory. Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white".
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1) I have not followed the entire thread closely. Is a distinction being made between pre- and post-Arabicization/Islamicization? 2) This is factually incorrect in either case. Ricardo Duchesne wrote: Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white".
Re: guns, germs, steel (fwd)
but Sudan is classified as part of "Northern Africa", and sometimes Middle East. Sudanese workers go to work in Egypt as seasonal workers. There is some african labor force living in Egypt, particulary in the south, and in other regions such as persian gulf states. This distinction between black and white africa is a little bit fishy me thinks, given that a self-identified Egyptian would not define herself "white", but "Arab". Mine Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white".
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Ricardo says that Diamond is a direct challenge to dependency theory. I think that he would agree that institutions play a larger role after 1600 than before. He deals with before that time. I've been browsing through Lexis-Nexis this afternoon on and off trying to get a handle on Diamond. It appears that his theory lends itself to rather clearcut differences between let's say the British settlers and the aborigines of Australia and why one group conquered another. However, it seems rather banal to spend 900 pages or so making this argument. This, however, is not what is gnawing at people involved in trying to understand why Europe prevailed. It has to do with Europe's relationship to India and China. The one thing I didn't mention in my note on Frank earlier is the powerful mass of evidence he produces on behalf of the argument that between 1400 and 1800 China and India were more "advanced" than Europe. Not only did they produce more wealth, they were also more efficient from a Weberian standpoint. Although Diamond's book is meant to explain how these roles were reversed, I can't see how. Animals were domesticated in Asia as well as Europe. China had the largest iron foundaries in the world in the 1600s. I would suggest that the biggest problem with Diamond's book is that it encourages a fatalistic attitude. The inequality of nations is attributed to the "luck of the draw". Some people were lucky enough to be born in hospitable geographical locales while others bought losing tickets. While it is commendable that he wrote the book in order to refute racist myths about the superiority of whites, we should realize that very few people nowadays preach racial superiority. Our main problem is not the kind of ideology that prevailed in the 19th century, but rather one that adapts to the status quo. Louis Proyect (The Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org)
Re: Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
I agree with Lou. But on this an interesting exchange took place in Toronto Star a few years ago. A Somalian refugee wrote a letter chastising the black community for not doing more for refugees from that part of the world. Some one responded that it was because they did not consider Somalians and Ethiopians to be black. I haven't been able to figure it out, but that is what it said. Rod Hay Louis Proyect wrote: the east African coast, the House of Peace, have a name from a language whose heartland is two thousand miles north? Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. Why isn't Dar-es-Salaam considered part of Black Africa? For that matter, what constitutes Black Africa? I think it might make sense to distinguish Subsaharan Africa from North Africa, but from a socioeconomic perspective Dar-es-Salaam and Timbuktu certainly can be grouped together. -- Rod Hay [EMAIL PROTECTED] The History of Economic Thought Archive http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/index.html Batoche Books http://Batoche.co-ltd.net/ 52 Eby Street South Kitchener, Ontario N2G 3L1 Canada
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/10/00 03:22PM I was a little unclear. At first it seemed you were saying that the author was explaining the conquests of the last 500 years. Then there seems to be discussion going back to the origin of agriculture , which is 7,000 years ago or so. Anyway, this list had a very rich debate on the cause of European conquest over the last 500 years, as you know. It would be hard to explain it as geographical. But I may not have understood the author's argument in the book. To Diamond, the conquests of the last 500 years ago arose because Eurasia (especially Europe) gained its advantage in the previous 7,000 years or so. So Europe could then accumulate advantages at Africa's expense (the development of underdevelopment). _ CB: There's something wrong with Diamond's reasoning here. Who had the advantage during the previous 7000 years ? Or was there no advantage ? For most of the 7000 years, Africa, in Egypt, had the "higher" civilization ( and it was higher in part because they didn't have as much of an urge to conquer, i.e. were more peaceful). Then they were about "even". As to "Asia" , Africa and Asia were about "even" through most of the 7000 years. Asia never conquered Africa or vice versa. But at any rate, for most of the time the ecology of Europe was not an advantage. So, the "accumulation" based on ecology and geography idea seems flawed. Accumulating ecological and geographical advantages isn't logical _ Geographical determinism is a bit tricky. It gets tricky to make a causal link between geography and a "conquering" mentality or cultural value. You probably know that there have been ecological schools in anthropology and archeology for a long time ( You mention Childe and Carneiro ;See the reader _Prehistoric Agriculture_ edited by Stuart Struever, or Ecological Anthropology edited by Yehudi Cohen). Anthropologists/Archeologists might be defending their turf , as you mention, but on the other hand , as you say, the topic you summarize is not at all a new subject for anthro/archeo. right. Marvin Harris, one of my favorite reads in the subject, is an ecological anthro-type (with a much greater emphasis on culture than Diamond). CB: Yes, I must admit though that even Harris is vulgar materialist in my schema now, though _ The Rise and Fall of Anthropological Theory_ was one of my first theory book. So, Diamond's thesis is really vulgar, ecological/geographical determinism. _ I don't think Diamond explains the "conquering mentality." The expansionary drive is _assumed_ as part of his tacit Malthusianism, i.e., that a successful society tends to have too many children, so that it looks for new lands to conquer (along with improvements in technology and organization). To me, Malthusianism goes out the window as even a partly valid theory with the agricultural revolutions that preceded the industrial revolutions of the 19th century in Europe. But the establishment of capitalism in Western Europe created a new kind of expansionary -- conquering -- drive. _ CB: Yes, Diamond is really getting tangled here. For, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 000 years ago, there were plenty of places for successful populaton growing societies to migrate to without conquering other people ( and I believe you say Diamond is not focussed on the last 500 years as that is the reason he doesn't contradict Wallerstein). So, a conquering mentality does not automatically follow even from population growth. Also, conquering other peoples increases your population more, as opposed to spinning off groups to unoccupied land. Seems to me conquest mentality is a byproduct of a society with exploiting classes. Getting people, not land. Even the ancients new that humans, not nature , is the source of surplus values. (Marx got the distinction between use-value and exchange-value from Aristotle). _ Why does he say "Eurasians" and not "Europeans" conquered the Western Hemisphere ? ... And before the last 500 years the Europeans were not dominant. His theory only explains the Eurasian ascendancy. _ CB: But there is no fact of "Eurasian" ascendancy. In the period, before 500 years ago, Africa was on top as much as Asia and more than Europe. He is empirically wrong. After 500 years ago it is just Europe , not Asia that ascends. His "Eurasian" category seems to be an ideological ( not scientific) anti-Africanism. ___ He has a very incomplete explanation of why the Europeans were on the cutting edge of that ascendancy in 1500. That's not really what his book is about. The discussion of Europe comes only in the epilogue. _ CB: So, it seems the main period of his book is based on a gross historical inaccuracy. There is no "Eurasian" unit superior to Africa before 1500. The fact that the Europeans conquered Africa and Asia ( which had had agriculture and
Re: guns, germs, steel
"Ricardo Duchesne" [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/10/00 04:27PM Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. __ CB: What does being BLACK Africa have to do with "ecological/geographical conditions" ? Sounds like Diamond has an inconsistent and racist theory. Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". _ CB: Yea, I know. How white of him to make the "superior" Africans honorary whites. CB
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
I agree with Lou. But on this an interesting exchange took place in Toronto Star a few years ago. A Somalian refugee wrote a letter chastising the black community for not doing more for refugees from that part of the world. Some one responded that it was because they did not consider Somalians and Ethiopians to be black. I haven't been able to figure it out, but that is what it said. Rod Hay The cultural history of Ethiopia and its connections with the black community in the US is extremely complex and interesting. There are several factors that create an inner tension that has never quite been resolved: 1. Ethiopia under the Solomonic dynasties was not only allied with European Christian nations, it viewed non-Christian nationalities in the southern regions as inferior, even though they were racially indistinguishable. 2. Ethiopia was the only nation that resisted colonialism successfully. At the battle of Adwa in 1896, the Italians were sent packing. This served to inspire black people everywhere, including Marcus Garvey. Garvey and Haile Selassie became heroes to the Rastafarians in Jamaica. (Ras Tafari was Selassie's name before becoming emperor.) 3. Despite the solidarity with Ethiopia, their emperors never oriented to the grass roots of the black community in the Americas. Selassie identified with the ruling classes and collaborated closely with the militaries in Great Britain and the US. So despite the symbolic importance of the name Abyssinian Baptist Church (Adam Clayton Powell's parish), Selassie never spent time there. Louis Proyect (The Marxism mailing list: http://www.marxmail.org)
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Brad writes: Ken Pomeranz's _The Great Divergence_ develops it to some degree--that the very *success* of India and China at mobilizing resources gave them large populations, and that Europe's earlier lack of success at mobilizing resources gave at an extra edge of free resources that helped propel it forward in the early modern period... this doesn't contradict Diamond, for what it's worth. His emphasis, however, is on how the unity of the Chinese empire (success) implied later failure due to lack of dynamism. In addition, I want to mention that Diamond doesn't really deal with India at all. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/10/00 05:05PM this doesn't contradict Diamond, for what it's worth. His emphasis, however, is on how the unity of the Chinese empire (success) implied later failure due to lack of dynamism. __ CB: This is consistent with the "law" of evolutionary potential. CB
Re: Re: Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
I've been browsing through Lexis-Nexis this afternoon on and off trying to get a handle on Diamond. It appears that his theory lends itself to rather clearcut differences between let's say the British settlers and the aborigines of Australia and why one group conquered another. However, it seems rather banal to spend 900 pages or so making this argument. Whether it's banal or not depends on whether you're interested in the subject or not. This, however, is not what is gnawing at people involved in trying to understand why Europe prevailed. It has to do with Europe's relationship to India and China. The one thing I didn't mention in my note on Frank earlier is the powerful mass of evidence he produces on behalf of the argument that between 1400 and 1800 China and India were more "advanced" than Europe. Not only did they produce more wealth, they were also more efficient from a Weberian standpoint. Although Diamond's book is meant to explain how these roles were reversed, I can't see how. Animals were domesticated in Asia as well as Europe. China had the largest iron foundaries in the world in the 1600s. The book doesn't really aim to explore the role reversal. The discussion of the subject is an afterthought, in the epilogue. He sketches a little bit of answer, mostly to indicate that his theory _might_ be relevant. Diamond actually talks a lot about the static superiority of the Chinese political economy to that of Europe in say, 1600, and the large number of important innovations that China developed in the centuries before that. (BTW, as I've noted before, even Adam Smith was aware of China's wealth in 1776.) He really doesn't try to explain how the roles were reversed (as I noted) except to say that excessive unity and hierarchy led to dynamic problems, as when the Empire called off its foreign explorations in search of "treasure." These dynamic problems meant that China would fall behind the more aggressively dynamic Europeans. I would suggest that the biggest problem with Diamond's book is that it encourages a fatalistic attitude. The inequality of nations is attributed to the "luck of the draw". Some people were lucky enough to be born in hospitable geographical locales while others bought losing tickets. While it is commendable that he wrote the book in order to refute racist myths about the superiority of whites, we should realize that very few people nowadays preach racial superiority. Our main problem is not the kind of ideology that prevailed in the 19th century, but rather one that adapts to the status quo. I wish that ideologies of racial supremacy were that rare. Didn't some folks write a book called THE BELL CURVE just a few years ago, spawning much acclaim and, from the left, many attacks? Don't the LAPD and NYPD and other police forces use racial profiling to target minority groups that they and their constituencies see as racially inferior? As someone whose father was racist, I see any contribution to the battle against racism as positive. In any event, as I noted, because Diamond doesn't deal with either the "development of underdevelopment" process or capitalism -- both of which really took off only at the end of the period he discusses -- his theory is inherently irrelevant to helping us understand what's has been going on since. So it hardly encourages fatalism unless one makes a "category error" and applies his theories to a situation to which his theory is irrelevant. (I know that I didn't feel more fatalistic after reading the book.) Finally, I don't think it's valid to judge the quality of anyone's logic or empirical research solely on the basis of the political conclusions ("fatalism") that one perceives can be drawn from that work. This is especially true given the way exactly the same theory -- e.g., the theory of the tendential fall in the rate of profit under capitalism -- can be interpreted politically in several different ways. One of these interpretations includes fatalism, BTW. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine
Good review of guns, germs, steel
My friend (whose opinion I trust on just about everything) had this to say about the book: Yes, I've actually read the whole book. It's okay in some ways, but his geographical determinism tends to undercut his avowed anti-racist stance--notions of chance (contingency) get lost, so Diamond winds up arguing, in effect, that imperialism is historically inevitable, and that the inhabitants of Europe (whether they had been "white" or not) would have dominated the world anyway. Also, it's so grand in its ambition that historically specific moments come off looking merely like manifestations of general, immutable laws. So much for agency, responsibility, and finally politics, or the notion that anything could have been (could be) different. Yes, he likes the New Guineans. And the Australian aborigines, etc. But then, so do lots of white folks. And liking the oppressed isn't the same thing as understanding/resisting oppression. To me, Diamond's book is another example of the ease with which scientific explanations of human society can make existing relations of power seem natural and irresistible--in his case, as if they're written into the very rocks and soil and coastlines of the continents. To be sure, he seems to have good intentions. But his main point is to show that imperialism isn't a result of racial superiority. Excuse me, but don't we already know that--at least those of us who care?
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Because, he would say, that region is not Africa, that is, Black Africa. __ CB: What does being BLACK Africa have to do with "ecological/geographical conditions" ? Sounds like Diamond has an inconsistent and racist theory. Simply saying that one can, as Diamond does, draw a rough line accross the African continent to distinguish "white" Africa from "black" Africa proper. Egyptians, Tunisians, Moroccans, Libyans and others in the Northern areas are "white". No. They're not. They're Mediterranean--it's really easy for them to trade, fight, and learn from people from all over Eurasia...
Re: Good review of guns, germs, steel
You wrote: Also, it's so grand in its ambition that historically specific moments come off looking merely like manifestations of general, immutable laws. So much for agency, responsibility, and finally politics, or the notion that anything could have been (could be) different. It has always seemed to me to be a socialist fundamental that people make themselves, as Marx says, not necessarily in conditions of their own making. This kind of biological/geographic determinism I find to be contrary to human agency and human will and therefore of the genus of Eugenics and fascism. There is only one race, the human race. Ethnic divisions within it are cultural, not genetic. Human experience is conditioned by geography, climate, the availability of resources, the social and economic institutions both within and without the local cultures -- ie. by conditions not of our making. I can not believe that any socialist could take socio-biology seriously given this context. Paul Phillips, Economics, University of Manitoba
guns, germs, steel
(book review) I've finally finished with a very long (425 pages) but extremely interesting, well-written, and informative book of archaeology and anthropology, Jared Diamond's GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL (Norton, 1997). The book argues for a reasonable theory about why the occupants of Eurasia have conquered the other continents (especially the New World) during the last 500+ years rather than being conquered by the rest of the world. In the end, we of Eurasian extraction were _lucky_, having the right kind of geography, access to wild plants and animals that could be domesticated, plus a relatively small number of ecological or geographical barriers which allowed diffusion through trade, migration, or conquest. This allowed us to grow in population, grow geographically, and take over almost all of the world. BTW, Brad DeLong has a good review of the book at http://econ161.berkeley.edu/Econ_Articles/Reviews/diamond_guns.html. As he notes, the book is "truly a work of complete of total genius." He's at least a genius at synthesizing others' research. But not being a professional archeologists or anthropologist, I don't know how original this book is. (I've heard rumblings that say the book "isn't new," though that may be a protective response to a field being invaded by a non-specialist.) One thing that is clear from the beginning is that Diamond, despite his origins and his residence (here in L.A.), makes a big effort to avoid Eurocentrism. In a strange way, he comes off "New Guinea" centric instead, even asserting that he thinks the residents of the New Guinea highlands are superior to us White Americans. He doesn't see the Eurasian conquest as a good thing, though he does see it as one example of a more general phenomenon that includes the Austronesian conquest of much of Southeast Asia, the Bantu conquest of most of sub-Saharan Africa, and the Maori conquest of the Morioris in the Chatham Islands in 1835. And as Brad says, the book really doesn't explain why those from Europe have dominated the rest of Eurasia during the last 500+ years. Diamond's focus is on broadly defined ecological zones (roughly, continents). For example, he defines Eurasia as including North Africa. His time scale is even broader, dealing with the 13,000-year time period before 1600 C.E. (A.D.) or so. Diamond's theory is ecological, inspired by evolutionary biology. At one point he summarizes it as embracing "geographical determinism," though that determinism is at a very abstract level over very long periods of time, leaving a lot of wiggle-room for specific differences in different areas and time periods. To summarize his story, it's a bit like the spread of "opportunistic species" of plants and animals (like those invading Hawaii now or the "killer bees" entering my neck of the woods), taking over all other possible geographical zones. As I read the book, I began to think more and more of a quote from Stephen J. Gould's concerning the worldwide spread of McDonald's and similar restaurants. It "introduces standardization at the wrong level by usurping the smaller spaces of immediate and daily use, the places that cry out for local distinction and an attendant sense of community. McDonald's is a flock of pigeons ordering all endemic birds to the block, a horde of rats wiping out all the mice, gerbils, hamsters, chinchillas, squirrels, beavers, and capybaras" (EIGHT LITTLE PIGGIES, p. 244). When I looked up the quote, I found the reference to rats and pigeons was not a description of fact. But the real world seems to imitate Gould's fantasy: the process of urbanization seems to wipe out all sorts of native species, allowing the pigeons to take over. International transportation allows the spread of fire ants, "Dutch" elm disease, and various weeds and germs, that wipe out or out-compete native species, so that eventually we'll see pretty much the same plants and animals ruling the roost in similar ecologies all around the world. Human cultures and technologies follow a similar pattern, while bringing opportunistic flora, fauna, and microbes with them. (You can see why I don't think he's Eurocentric.) Though genetics plays a role in Diamond's theory, he basically assumes that all varieties of humanity and culture are equal in their inherent or biological ability to innovate and spread world-wide. Further, the Eurasian conquest, like related conquests, wasn't done through a Darwinian process of competition of species and propagation via genetics as much as through competition of ethnic groups and propagation via organizational and technological advantage. The development of agriculture created an advantage over the surviving hunter-gatherers, so that the hunter-gatherers were shoved aside into the hinterlands. Farmers -- especially those with access to a wide variety of wild seeds and potential load-bearing animals -- could produce surpluses, encouraging the
Re: guns, germs, steel
Jim Devine wrote have mentioned one other slightly Marx-like touch: Diamond observes that a surplus is required before the superstructure of the state can be erected. However, Diamond seems to be more of a materialist than a Marxist since he does not concern himself with either class or social relations. -- Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University Chico, CA 95929 Tel. 530-898-5321 E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Re: guns, germs, steel
Michael wrote: Jim Devine wrote have mentioned one other slightly Marx-like touch: Diamond observes that a surplus is required before the superstructure of the state can be erected. However, Diamond seems to be more of a materialist than a Marxist since he does not concern himself with either class or social relations. he deals with both class and social relations. However, the only time he deals with class is the pre-capitalist case in which the economic ruling class and the political governing class are merged into one kleptocracy (kingships, etc.) He doesn't deal with the case of capitalism, in which the state and the economic ruling class seem to be separated, so that the state seems to be separate from "civil society." But in reality, the state power stands behind the capitalists. On the issue of social relations, he also deals with egalitarian pre-class societies and chiefdoms on the way to becoming states. But his analysis seems sketchier than the ecological side of his analysis. Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~JDevine/JDevine.html