ABSTRACT

In his 1997 work Guns, Germs and Steel, Jared Diamond marshals evidence from five continents and across 13,000 years of human history in an attempt to answer the question of why that history unfolded so differently in various parts of the globe. His results offer new explanations for why the unequal divisions of power and wealth so familiar to us today came into existence – and have persisted.

Balancing materials drawn from a vast range of sources, addressing core problems that have fascinated historians, anthropologists, biologists and geographers alike – and blending his analysis to create a compelling narrative that became an international best-seller and reached a broad general market – required a mastery of the critical thinking skill of reasoning that few other scholars can rival. Diamond’s reasoning skills allow him to persuade his readers of the value of his interdisciplinary approach and produce well-structured arguments that keep them turning pages even as he refocuses his analysis from one disparate example to another.

Diamond adds to that a spectacular ability to grasp the meaning of the available evidence produced by scholars in those widely different disciplines – making Guns, Germs and Steel equally valuable as an exercise in high-level interpretation.

chapter |5 pages

Ways In To The Text

section 1|19 pages

Influences

chapter 1|4 pages

The Author and the Historical Context

chapter 2|5 pages

Academic Context

chapter 3|5 pages

The Problem

chapter 4|4 pages

The Author’s Contribution

section 2|19 pages

Ideas

chapter 5|5 pages

Main Ideas

chapter 6|5 pages

Secondary Ideas

chapter 7|4 pages

Achievement

chapter 8|4 pages

Place In The Author’s Work

section 3|21 pages

Impact

chapter 9|5 pages

The First Responses

chapter 10|5 pages

The Evolving Debate

chapter 11|5 pages

Impact and Influence Today

chapter 12|5 pages

Where Next?