Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at,...

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Guns, Germs, and Steel

Transcript of Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at,...

Page 1: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Guns, Germs, and Steel

Page 2: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.
Page 3: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the New World.

Cover art:

Sir John Everett Millais, Pizarro seizing the Inca of Peru, 1845

Page 4: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Advance of Christianity

Heroic Conquistadors

Weak, effeminate, native leader

Frightened, superstitious natives.

Page 5: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

• The painting reflects a firmly held belief that Europe conquered the world starting around 1500 AD because Europeans were simply better, smarter, etc. and ordained by God to conquer ignorant savages.

Page 6: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

• This view, either consciously or subconsciously, is still common.

• At some level, like most important questions of historical consequence, it has intense political dimensions.

Page 7: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

After all…

• “Why did Pizarro come to capture Atahuallpa, instead of Atahuallpa’s coming to Spain to capture King Charles I?”

Page 8: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

After all…

• Pizarro: 62 mounted soldiers.

• Pizarro: 106 infantrymen

Defeats:

• Atahuallpa: approx. 80,000 soldiers

Page 9: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

?

• Doesn’t this point to European superiority?

Page 10: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

The Spanish had an edge:

• Animals: Horses

• Technology: Steel and Writing

• Germs

• Crops

• Geography

Page 11: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

?

• How did the Europeans come to possess all of these advantages?

• Is this just further evidence of European superiority?

Page 12: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Enter Jared Diamond…

• If we want to see how these societies became so different, we need to look at their roots.

• Guns, Germs, and Steel traces the development of world societies from ancient times.

• Let’s start by winding the clock back several thousand years….

Page 13: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Animals

Page 14: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Horses & Domestic animals

• A certain element of luck: the first domesticated horses came from Eurasia.

• In the New World, there simply weren’t the right type of animals to domesticate

• Not just horses, but food draft and food animals as well, Eurasia had an edge.

Page 15: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Horses

• Horses are a big tactical advantage

• (Height, speed, size, terror factor)

• Indians don’t have horses Like Mr. Ed

Page 16: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Some bad luck: Why not Africa?

• Africa, like the Americas did not have the basic species capable of useful domesticity

• You cannot domesticate a Zebra, for instance, even though it looks kind of like a horse.

Page 17: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Actually…

• Other than the llama, the biggest domesticated animals in the New World at the time of European contact were small dogs.

Page 18: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Domesticated Animals

• Domesticated animals also provide:

• 1) Labor (draft animals – mules, oxen)

• 2) Food (porkchops, steak, barbeque, hamburgers, bacon, sausage, filet mignon, pot roast, garlic braised leg of lamb, darn, I’m getting hungry already!)

• 3) Transportation & War machines: horses

Page 19: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Technology

Page 20: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Steel

• Edged Weapons and Armor made of steel (swords, helmets, chain mail, lances, and a few harquebusier – early guns)

• Incas: stone weapons (obsidian) and armor made of quilted cotton.

Page 21: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Government & Technology

• Well fed, European populations grew large.

• Large numbers of people not involved in the production of food can dedicate their attention to other pursuits

• Large societies develop governments and literacy

Page 22: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Literacy & Writing

• Only native elites knew the complex Indian writing systems

• Confusion reigned supreme in the Incan army when Pizarro landed.

• Every Spanish raiding party had at least several literate members.

• Very important for planning and communication

Page 23: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Geography

Page 24: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Continental Axis

Jared Diamond:

Geography mattered:

1)Dictated the domesticable species available (plant and animal)

2)Dictated the ease at which they spread.

Page 25: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Continental Axis & Europe

• The geography of Europe and Western Asia are conducive to the spread of these plant and animal species

• The geography of Africa (Sahara desert, jungles, large mountain ranges) is not. – Many barriers, differing climates.

• Similarly, The Americas also had a north-south orientation and were separated by an ocean from useful species.

Page 26: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Crops

Page 27: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Continental Axis: Climate

Temperature also stays more the same in the same longitude (east-west) versus moving across latitude (north-south)

Thus, crops that grow in Western Russia will also grow in France. But crops grown in France will NOT grow in Libya.

Cold Winters

Warm mostly year-round

Tropical/Hot year-round

Page 28: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Why does this matter?

• What Jared Diamond calls “Farmer Power.”

• European and Eurasian societies had domesticable grain crops available to them that allowed a FRACTION of the population to feed ALL of the population.

• Continental axis allowed them to spread through Eurasia, but not elsewhere.

Page 29: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Crops

• For instance, wheat and barley are very nutritious and yield a lot per acre.

• European societies grew larger because they had abundant food production

Page 30: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Crops

• When the production of food only requires part of the population, there are people left over to become a ruling elite, artisans, engineers, etc.

• Ultimately you have division of labor and governmental structure. Chiefdoms, then kingdoms.

Page 31: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Germs

Page 32: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Animals & Disease

• Domestic animals are not the cleanest things in the world.

• Often living in very close proximity with humans, not to mention their own feces.

• Transmission of all kinds of crazy diseases.

Page 33: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Disease: Germs

Europeans:surplus of food = growing populations, more density of population.greater density = living in close quarters with one another (diseases)living in close quarters with animals(more diseases)

Europeans will contract many diseases over time. More importantly, they will also develop immunity to them.

Page 34: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Disease: Germs

• Disease will be a very critical element in the European conquest of the New World

• Valley of Mexico in 1450: 16 million people

• All of Mexico by 1600: 2 million people

• Smallpox, scarlet fever

Page 35: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Germs

• The Spanish carried lethal diseases with them that the Indians had never seen before to which they had no immunity.

• Disease actually got to the Incas a generation before Pizarro ever made it there. This created a massive disruption and a civil war in Incan society.

Page 36: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Time

• Europe, and by extension, Eurasian society had built up its immunity to diseases, it societies, governments over several thousand years in isolation of the societies that they conquered.

Page 37: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

European domination at 1500 AD

• Thus, genetic diversity + ease of spreading domesticable species of plants & animals along the continental axis allowed Europe especially to develop large societies.

• Biodiversity and proximity (and filth!) created disease and immunities

• Dense populations produced governments, technology, and desire to explore for new worlds.

Page 38: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

Lastly

• Does this put the thesis of European superiority in a new light?

• The work of Jared Diamond in Guns, Germs and Steel does not address everything, but is an interesting argument from the world of science.

Page 39: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

21st Century

• How do these variables fit into gaining global power today?

• How they were different during the Age of Exploration?

Page 40: Guns, Germs, and Steel. The cover art actually says a lot about the way the Western world looked at, and sometimes still looks at the conquest of the.

AnimalsAnimals

CropsCrops

GeographyGeography

TechnologyTechnology

GermsGerms