A Very Rough Diamond

Jared Diamondโ€™s Guns, Germs, and Steel shouldโ€™ve actually been called Germs, Christianity, Culture, and Economics. Christianity was the vital cultural technology that allowed such a violent and comprehensive imperial expansion, and economic ideas and technologies (also heavily influenced by Christianity) provided the engine thereof.

There can be non-experts in a field who write a book that is perspicacious and breaks new ground. Alas, Diamondโ€™s book is not one of those. It is anthropologically unsound, ashistorical, and ignores the most important elements in favor of relatively-unimportant ones (guns, steel).

Diamond went the long, stupid way โ€™round to โ€œproveโ€ the genetic non-superiority of European populations. The whole idea of genetic superiority is already prima facie idiotic, so why all the โ€œbeing colossally wrongโ€ was necessary, I havenโ€™t any idea.

Itโ€™s not that all of Diamondโ€™s ideas are wrong, or even bad. Itโ€™s that history is far, far more contingent than Diamond gives credit for, and if events had turned a little differently, Diamond wouldโ€™ve been able to find post hoc reasons for why they occurred, too.