Originally posted by ike7
That was an excellent book, very readable.
In addition to the excellent sections on food crop and animal domestication, i liked the chapter on technology indifference.
It seems that many cultures discovered technologies at incredibly early stages, and promptly ignored them, or used them for very mundane tasks. The Japanese ignoring firearms because the samurai ruled their society, the Chinese ignoring ocean-faring vessels.
It's interesting to wonder if that emperor decided to not scrap all the ocean faring vessels and discovered the Americas centuries ahead of Europe. This would be quite a different world altogether.
That was an excellent book, very readable.
In addition to the excellent sections on food crop and animal domestication, i liked the chapter on technology indifference.
It seems that many cultures discovered technologies at incredibly early stages, and promptly ignored them, or used them for very mundane tasks. The Japanese ignoring firearms because the samurai ruled their society, the Chinese ignoring ocean-faring vessels.
It's interesting to wonder if that emperor decided to not scrap all the ocean faring vessels and discovered the Americas centuries ahead of Europe. This would be quite a different world altogether.
For example, if the US was isolated, we could decide to ignore stem cell research, and that would be that; but in an interconnected world someone, somewhere will research it, and if it works better then any alternatives, we'll probably adopt the technology eventually.
On the other hand, too many small, warring cultures also stops technological development. Stuff seems to develop faster when there's a balance, or so he thought.
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