Environmental damage, climate change, globalization, rapid population growth, and unwise political choices were all factors in the demise of societies around the world, but some found solutions and persisted. As in Guns, Germs, and Steel, Diamond traces the fundamental pattern of catastrophe, and weaves an all-encompassing global thesis through a series of fascinating historical-cultural narratives. Collapse moves from the Polynesian cultures on Easter Island to the flourishing American civilizations of the Anasazi and the Maya and finally to the doomed Viking colony on Greenland. Similar problems face us today and have already brought disaster to Rwanda and Haiti, even as China and Australia are trying to cope in innovative ways. Despite our own society's apparently inexhaustible wealth and unrivaled political power, ominous warning signs have begun to emerge even in ecologically robust areas like Montana.
Brilliant, illuminating, and immensely absorbing, Collapse is destined to take its place as one of the essential books of our time, raising the urgent question: How can our world best avoid committing ecological suicide?
Paleoecologist @UMaine trying to be a good ancestor. Climate change, biodiversity, extinction. @MakeAPlanetPod @OurWarmRegards She/her 🏳️🌈
@cwmagee @IBJIYONGI @MaryHeglar If your source is Jared Diamond, you should know that most archaeologists, anthropologists, and geographers find fault with his collapse framing (Diamond is an ornithologist by training who dabbled in history in his retirement). Adapting to a changing environment is not collapse.
Helen De Cruz is a philosophy professor.
There is *a lot* of recent discussion on why and how large-scale societies collapse. This ranges from the idea that past societies depleted their resources without forethought (e.g Jared Diamond), to ecological and other circumstances that were beyond their control 12/
the hairy-handed gent who ran amok in Kent; lately: overheard in Mayfair 🏴 / #GoDucks🦆 #RipCity #RepBX #FTTB #GoAvsGo
#NowReading: "Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed" by Jared Diamond. (THE SEQUEL! TO GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL! YES!) https://t.co/pFwubP9WbP
"...Collapse is a magisterial effort packed with insight and written with clarity and enthusiasm." --Businessweek
"Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse represent one of the most significant projects embarked upon by any intellectual of our generation. They are magnificent books: extraordinary in erudition and originality, compelling in their ability to relate the digitized pandemonium of the present to the hushed agrarian sunrises of the far past. I read both thinking what literature might be like if every author knew so much, wrote so clearly and formed arguments with such care." --Gregg Easterbrook, The New York Times Book Review