For my English and history courses (which are somewhat integrated) we're reading Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel. I've already read it, and I think it's and AWESOME choice for integrated Enlish and history. I loved the book.
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Guns, Germs, and Steel
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I like how he merges the motifs with a complacent blend of post-modern history with amicable animosity."The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "
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Some good ideas, but the execution is a bit sloppy at times, with a lot of belaboring the obvious. You can tell that he isn't a trained historian. But the bit where he looks at where domesticated animals/plants come from and the conclusions he draws from that are pretty itneresting.
For a much better look at the germs bit of the three read Plagues and Peoples by Willian McNeill which is absolutely amazing.Stop Quoting Ben
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1. Huge amount of repetition.
2. Politically correct (and silly) contradictory comments in the introduction (or is it first chapter?)
3. Used to advance a viewpoint but never proves that viewpoint. (i.e. proving significant cause from factor X, does not disprove significant cause from factor Y, especially in the social sciences where there is so much damn noise anyway.)
4. No footnotes. Pathetic. Lots of popular books have footnotes. Read A Beautiful Mind or The Bell Curve or On Modern War. These are all popular NYT bestseller nonfiction books. Full of footnotes.
5. (troll) Apppeals to pseudo-intellectuals and should never have gotten the Pulitzer. Very trendy and overrated.
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Originally posted by TCO
1. Huge amount of repetition.
2. Politically correct (and silly) contradictory comments in the introduction (or is it first chapter?)
3. Used to advance a viewpoint but never proves that viewpoint. (i.e. proving significant cause from factor X, does not disprove significant cause from factor Y, especially in the social sciences where there is so much damn noise anyway.)
4. No footnotes. Pathetic. Lots of popular books have footnotes. Read A Beautiful Mind or The Bell Curve or On Modern War. These are all popular NYT bestseller nonfiction books. Full of footnotes.
5. (troll) Apppeals to pseudo-intellectuals and should never have gotten the Pulitzer. Very trendy and overrated.He's got the Midas touch.
But he touched it too much!
Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!
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Chapter 1, TCO. He goes on and on about how you can't really compare IQ's across cultures and differing levels of "advancement", and then lays the following bombs on his reader:
In fact, as I shall explain in a moment, modern "Stone Age" peoples are on the average probably more intelligent, not less intelligent, than industrialized peoples. Paradoxical as it may sound... white immigrants to Australia do not deserve the credit usually accorded to them for building a literate industrialized society
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From the very beginning of my work with New Guineans, they impressed me as being on the average more intelligent, more alert, more expressive, anc more interested in things and people around them than the average European and America is...
It is easy to recognize two reasons why my impression that New Guineans are smarter than Westerners may be correct... this effect surely contributes a non-genetic component to the superior average mental function displayed by New Guineans. That is, in mental ability New Guineans are probably genetically superior to Westerners...
Hell, Diamond should've prefaced Chapter one with "I am not a racist, but..."
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Now I'm confused. Diamond says in Chapter 1:
white immigrants to Australia do not deserve the credit usually accorded to them for building a literate industrialized society
And you say that Diamond argues later in the book that they do deserve the credit? Did they or did they not build a "literate industrial society"? If they did, Diamond's quote in chapter one is dumb. If they didn't (and the historical record does more than suggest otherwise), then Diamond is richly deserving of his Pulitzer and probably needs a few other awards as well for his total historical re-assessment of the causes of Australia's growth into a LIS.
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He claims genetic mental superiority of New Guineans, then neglects to examine genetic intelligence patterns anyewhere else (and implicitly and certainly in terms of how people use his work) argues against any patterns of genetic intelligence difference by population.
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