With the passing of time, perspective is something with which I've become very fond, and this book was a provocative perspective for me, in the same way the book, Women’s Diaries of the Westward Journey was. Before I read Diaries most of what I understood about the westward movement of the mid 1800's was the courage and determination of the frontiersmen and the savagery of the American Indians. In “Diaries” which was womens’ account of that same period, families traveling west in covered wagons withstood horrible conditions, buried their children along the trail, settled in extremely primitive conditions, and never saw their other family members again. Their diaries also said the frontier families would have never survived without the help of the Indians, who taught them how to ford rivers and plant corn. A very different perspective.
Sunday, November 5, 2017
Cluster Critiques
The Dry by Jane
Harper
When main character Aaron
Falk was a teenager he had to leave his small hometown in Australia because
something horrible happened. Twenty years later he reluctantly returns to
attend his high school best friend, Luke’s funeral. But Luke isn’t the only one dead
as his wife and young son were also found at a bloody scene that implicates Luke as the killer - of his family and himself.
Within a few hours of Aaron's arrival, Luke’s father is threatening Aaron, who is federal officer in Melbourne, with blackmail if he doesn't stay to prove
Luke didn’t kill himself and his family? Blackmail him for for? What happened 20 years ago and why do
the townspeople harbor such hate for Aaron? What, if anything does it have to
do with Luke and his family’s deaths.
Jane Harper's believable small community culture, colorful characters, and unique plot
textures keep the reader off balance, driving a compelling and satisfying
plot. Read it.
What Happened by Hillary
Rodham Clinton
Hillary has written another informative
and interesting book. Much of it is a rehash, albeit fascinating rehash of the
story of her commendable and impressive history of public service and the
disasters and victories that hallmark that history. And much of it is in
defense of the controversies used against her by both Obama and Trump.
If you’ve not read her other
books or books about her, it will be impressive; if you have you may find
yourself wanting to skip thorough chapters. Once you get past everything
leading up to her second bid for the Presidency, much of this book is about the
day-to-day drudgery of the campaign trail, along with surprisingly believable
and touching vignettes featuring her seasoned relationship with Bill Clinton
and her reflections on grandmother-hood.
Unfortunately, although
Clinton very effectively tells us “what happened” during her life, her public
service, and her several election bids, I don’t feel like she tells us “what
happened” in terms of “why” she didn’t win her race against Donald Trump - because she doesn’t really understand herself.
She of course discusses
Russian interference and touches on the undercurrent of “white, male
discontent,” but at the core of it all is the unsettling truth that even hindsight doesn't reveal. It is still simply confounding – to Hillary, to me, to the press,
to the Democratic and Republican Parties, to many voters, and probably even
to Trump.
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval
Noah Harari
When I learned that my BFF in New Mexico, and Keanu Reeves and Bill Gates all loved this book. I knew I had to read it, and
I too couldn't put it down! Why? I can't speak for my BFF, Keanu or Bill, but for me, Sapiens was a fresh and intriguing perspective on human history, un-tinted by religious doctrine and untainted by human arrogance, and certainly a version of the history of Homo Sapiens I’d not heard before.
With the passing of time, perspective is something with which I've become very fond, and this book was a provocative perspective for me, in the same way the book, Women’s Diaries of the Westward Journey was. Before I read Diaries most of what I understood about the westward movement of the mid 1800's was the courage and determination of the frontiersmen and the savagery of the American Indians. In “Diaries” which was womens’ account of that same period, families traveling west in covered wagons withstood horrible conditions, buried their children along the trail, settled in extremely primitive conditions, and never saw their other family members again. Their diaries also said the frontier families would have never survived without the help of the Indians, who taught them how to ford rivers and plant corn. A very different perspective.
With the passing of time, perspective is something with which I've become very fond, and this book was a provocative perspective for me, in the same way the book, Women’s Diaries of the Westward Journey was. Before I read Diaries most of what I understood about the westward movement of the mid 1800's was the courage and determination of the frontiersmen and the savagery of the American Indians. In “Diaries” which was womens’ account of that same period, families traveling west in covered wagons withstood horrible conditions, buried their children along the trail, settled in extremely primitive conditions, and never saw their other family members again. Their diaries also said the frontier families would have never survived without the help of the Indians, who taught them how to ford rivers and plant corn. A very different perspective.
Bill Gates’ review of Sapiens is good, and although I don't agree with everything he says, worth sharing (click on read more below).
When Melinda and I went on our spring
vacation, I encouraged her to pack a copy of Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens:
A Brief History of Humankind. I had just finished the book and I
was dying to talk to her about it. It’s so provocative and raises so many
questions about human history that I knew it would spark great conversations
around the dinner table. It didn’t disappoint. In fact, in the weeks since
we’ve been back from our holiday, we still talk about Sapiens.
Harari, who is an Israeli historian,
takes on a daunting challenge: to tell the entire history of us, the human
race, in a mere 400 pages. I’ve always been a fan of writers who try to connect
the dots and make sense of the sweep of history. Probably no one has done it
better than David Christian in his Big History
lectures, which distill 13.7 billion years of history, from the Big Bang on,
into a manageable framework that spans biology, physics, humanities, and the
social sciences. While Harari concerns himself with a shorter time frame, the
last 70,000 years of human history, his job is no less difficult. He sets out
to explain how we, Homo sapiens (Latin for “wise person”), came to
dominate the Earth and what may lie ahead for our species.
Most humans assume that we were always
the ones in charge, lording over the rest of the animals. But Harari reminds us
that long before we built the pyramids, wrote symphonies, or walked on the
moon, there was nothing special about us. “The most important thing to know
about prehistoric humans,” Harari writes, “is that they were insignificant
animals with no more impact on their environment than gorillas, fireflies or
jellyfish.”
One hundred thousand years ago, Homo
sapiens was just one
of a number of different human species, all competing for supremacy. Just as
today we see different species of bears or pigs, there were different species
of humans. While our own ancestors lived mainly in East Africa, our relatives Homo
neanderthalensis, better known as Neanderthals, inhabited Europe.
Another species, Homo erectus, populated Asia, and the
island of Java was home to Homo soloensis.
Each species adapted to its own
environment. Some were big, fearsome hunters, while others were dwarf-like
plant gatherers. As different as each species may have been, there is evidence
of interbreeding among them. Scientists mapping the Neanderthal genome, for
example, discovered that people of European origin today have a small
percentage of genes from their Neanderthal ancestors. (That will make an
interesting addition to many family trees!)
Today, of course, there is just one human
species alive. How did we Homo sapiensbecome so successful and
others did not? Harari believes it was our unique cognitive abilities that made
the difference. About 70,000 years ago, Homo sapiensunderwent a “cognitive
revolution,” Harari writes, which gave them the edge over their rivals to
spread from East Africa across the planet.
Other species had big brains too, but
what made Homo sapiens so successful is that we are the only
animals who are capable of large-scale cooperation. We know how to organize
ourselves as nations, companies, and religions, giving us the power to
accomplish complex tasks. Harari’s concept of a “cognitive revolution” reminded
me of David Christian’s notion in Big History of "collective
learning," how
the ability to share, store, and build upon information truly distinguishes us
as humans and allowed us to thrive.
What’s unique about Harari’s take is that
he focuses on the power of stories and myths to bring people together. Baboons,
wolves, and other animals also know how to function as a group, of course, but
their groups are defined by close social ties that limit their groups to small
numbers. Homo sapiens has the special ability to unite
millions of strangers around commons myths. Ideas like freedom, human rights,
gods, laws, and capitalism exist in our imaginations, yet they can bind us
together and motivate us to cooperate on complex tasks.
As much as I enjoyed Sapiens,
there was plenty to disagree with in the book. For example, Harari sets out to
prove that the agricultural revolution was one of the biggest mistakes in human
history. Yes, it allowed civilizations to thrive, but on an individual level,
he writes, we were much better off as hunter-gatherers. As farmers, people had
to work a lot harder and in exchange they had a worse diet than they had as
foragers. Agricultural societies also created social hierarchies in which the
majority toiled as peasants and a minority of elites ruled over them.
That’s certainly a provocative argument,
but I wasn’t convinced. First, arguing that we were happier as hunter-gatherers
than as farmers creates a choice when there isn’t one. It’s not as if we can
turn back the clock and restart as hunter-gatherers or we can run an experiment
to prove one way of life is better than the other. Second, I think Harari
underestimates the hardships of being a hunter-gatherer. He suggests that death
and violence rates were much lower in hunter-gatherer societies than after the
agricultural revolution. But it’s more likely the violence was higher because
of competition over resources. A farming society can support many more people
per square mile than a hunter-gathering society. In order to keep
population densities low, conflict was inevitable among groups of hunter-gatherers.
Finally, calling the shift to agriculture a “mistake” overlooks the fact that
farming societies were able to specialize, leading to written languages, new
technologies, and art—all things we value today.
Still, I would recommend this book to
anyone interested in a fun, engaging look at early human history. Like Big
History, it left me with an overarching historical structure which I can build
on as I learn more. At the same time, Harari tells our history in such an
approachable way that you’ll have a hard time putting it down. He uses vivid
language, photos, and diagrams to illustrate his points. He’s also an agile
writer, deftly weaving in entertaining historical stories, like the importance
of sauerkraut in sea exploration and why the earliest known written words from
5,000 years ago are a bit underwhelming.
I think many readers will find the final
section of the book especially stimulating. After marching through thousands of
years of history, Harari turns more philosophical as he writes about our
species today and how we might live in the future. He wonders how artificial
intelligence, genetic engineering, and other technologies will change our
species.
He also poses some fundamental questions
about happiness. When in our long history as Homo sapiens were we most fulfilled? As
hunter-gatherers chasing down mammoths? As farmers tilling the soil? Maybe as
God-fearing peasants in the Middle Ages? More fundamentally, he asks: Who are
we as a species? And where are we going?
Those are big questions as old as the
history of our species. After you finish this book I have no doubt that, like
me, you’ll want to get together with some of your favorite Homo
sapiens to try to
answer them.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment