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Jared Diamond
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Jared Diamond is an American scientist and author whose interdisciplinary work draws on evolutionary biology, anthropology, geography, and history to explain large-scale patterns in human civilization. Students most commonly encounter his ideas in courses covering world history, anthropology, development studies, and environmental studies. His book Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies is a central academic text that attempts to explain why certain societies came to dominate others, making Diamond a frequent subject of analysis wherever questions of global inequality, modernization, and historical causation are discussed.

Papers on this topic take a range of approaches. Some engage directly with Guns, Germs, and Steel through close reading and preface or chapter analysis, while others use Diamond's framework comparatively alongside modernization theories or concepts like orientalism to examine how different thinkers explain development and Western dominance. Historical perspectives appear as well, situating Diamond's arguments within broader narratives of Western civilization. Environmental themes also emerge, particularly around how misuse of natural resources contributes to societal collapse, a subject Diamond addresses across his work.

A strong essay on Diamond requires a clear, arguable thesis rather than a simple summary of his geographic determinism argument. Evidence drawn from specific examples he uses — such as the role of domesticable plants and animals or the spread of disease — carries more analytical weight than vague paraphrase. The most common pitfall is treating Diamond's thesis as either entirely correct or entirely wrong without engaging seriously with the counterarguments, particularly those raised within anthropology and postcolonial studies.

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Paper Doctorate
Amerindians (Wright) What Is Your
(Wright) What is your gut reaction to this reading? That once again, a comedy of errors turned into a serious situation when confronting another culture. The Europeans did not understand the Amerindians, the Amerindians…
Paper Undergraduate
Presumption, Often Promulgated by Scholars
Modernism, in one sense ,is a reaction to romanticism and classicism; the strict rules of art and the overly emotive forms and themes so popular in the late 19th century. Romanticism began as a reaction – not so much against anything concrete, more as a result of social moods of the time-period. In music it was a way to expand Classical "rules," harmonies, and forms of expression; in literature and poetry a broad range of reactions towards pieces that were too formal. As an artistic movement, then, romanticism meant many things, but focused on nature, the meaning and exploration of the self, the idea that it was permissible to bend the rules of society in order to engender self-actualization, and the freedom to challenge authority and reason. Modernism in literature, on the other hand, is the literary expression of tendencies that surround individualism, mistrust of institutions (political, social, religious), apathy, agnosticism, and individualism.
Paper Doctorate
Effects of religion on society and individual behavior
Jared Diamond, in his book Guns, Germs and Steel, notes the flurry of anthropological evidence suggesting that it was until the transition from mere tribes to chiefdoms that brought organized, socially-relevant religion…
Paper Undergraduate
Growth and Development World Inequality
Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
Research Paper Undergraduate
New York Times, by Benedict
¶ … New York Times, by Benedict Carey, "Who's Minding the Mind," he explains that a considerable number of research studies on human cognition have found that human beings are more reactive than they might think.
Research Paper Doctorate
Guns, germs and steel: the fates of human societies
Jared Diamond's book - Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies won the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize and the Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal.
Research Paper Doctorate
Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel
Based on Diamond's, Guns, Germs and Steel, what does Diamond conclude about the way we as a species have evolved? Also, Why is the west so "dominant" i.e. why did we wipe out the Indians in America instead of their…
Paper Doctorate
Conspicuous Consumption: Design and Purpose
Conspicuous Consumption: Design and Purpose
Essay Doctorate
History Naval Warfare What Was Naval Power
What was naval power in the age of sail and how did different sea going states exercise it from the period 1650-1850?
Research Paper Doctorate
Triumph of Western Civilization in the Book
In the book Guns, Germs, and Steel, the historian and New Guinea anthropologist Jared Diamond argues that the geography and the environment of the West played the major role in determining the dominance of Western…