Foragers, Farmers, and Fossil Fuels 在线电子书 图书标签: 历史 能源史 社会学 英國 美國 歷史 歐洲 文化研究
发表于2024-11-14
Foragers, Farmers, and Fossil Fuels 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024
Neoliberalism cliche. a very dangerous book obscuring the dark sides of modernity. Even reading one page of this book would be wasting time.
评分The writer generalizes broadly through three different energy stages. Energy capture determines the course a society takes on the macro-level, but doesn’t shape its micro-level actions. You have free will. Energy capture does not determine your actions. But it does shape your society.
评分Neoliberalism cliche. a very dangerous book obscuring the dark sides of modernity. Even reading one page of this book would be wasting time.
评分Neoliberalism cliche. a very dangerous book obscuring the dark sides of modernity. Even reading one page of this book would be wasting time.
评分The writer generalizes broadly through three different energy stages. Energy capture determines the course a society takes on the macro-level, but doesn’t shape its micro-level actions. You have free will. Energy capture does not determine your actions. But it does shape your society.
Ian Morris is the Willard Professor of Classics and a fellow of the Stanford Archaeology Center at Stanford University. He has directed excavations in Italy and Greece and has published thirteen previous books, including Why the West Rules—for Now (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), The Measure of Civilization (Princeton), and War! What Is It Good For? (FSG). He lives in Boulder Creek, California.
Most people in the world today think democracy and gender equality are good, and that violence and wealth inequality are bad. But most people who lived during the 10,000 years before the nineteenth century thought just the opposite. Drawing on archaeology, anthropology, biology, and history, Ian Morris, author of the best-selling Why the West Rules—for Now, explains why. The result is a compelling new argument about the evolution of human values, one that has far-reaching implications for how we understand the past—and for what might happen next.
Fundamental long-term changes in values, Morris argues, are driven by the most basic force of all: energy. Humans have found three main ways to get the energy they need—from foraging, farming, and fossil fuels. Each energy source sets strict limits on what kinds of societies can succeed, and each kind of society rewards specific values. In tiny forager bands, people who value equality but are ready to settle problems violently do better than those who aren’t; in large farming societies, people who value hierarchy and are less willing to use violence do best; and in huge fossil-fuel societies, the pendulum has swung back toward equality but even further away from violence.
But if our fossil-fuel world favors democratic, open societies, the ongoing revolution in energy capture means that our most cherished values are very likely to turn out—at some point fairly soon—not to be useful any more.
Originating as the Tanner Lectures delivered at Princeton University, the book includes challenging responses by novelist Margaret Atwood, philosopher Christine Korsgaard, classicist Richard Seaford, and historian of China Jonathan Spence.
独辟蹊径的“人类演化” 文/米雪 人类对自身的发展和由来一直是各家各言,因为人类科学技术再先进,却是不能坐回时光机去考察,所以人类如何演变,有多少流派就有多少种言论。《人类简史》、《自私的基因》...
评分 评分 评分每一本的护封内一面很少见地都有特别的内容, 然后集齐全部好像还能召唤什么东西..
评分乔治先生气定神闲地骑着驴,太太却背着沉重的麻袋艰难步行。莫里斯教授在希腊考古时偶然邂逅的小事,却引发了他对人类价值观的大思考:为什么在伯明翰被视为自私的行为,在希腊的阿希罗斯却理所当然? 伊恩•莫里斯是斯坦福大学历史学和古典文学教授,已出版《西方将主宰多...
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