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Yali’s Question, Diamond’s Answer

Yali’s Question, Diamond’s Answer. Unraveling Historical Inequality. Global Inequality What is Inequality? Does inequality exist in the World today? Where do you think it comes from? Historically, where do all the most powerful societies come from?.

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Yali’s Question, Diamond’s Answer

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  1. Yali’s Question, Diamond’s Answer Unraveling Historical Inequality

  2. Global Inequality • What is Inequality? • Does inequality exist in the World today? • Where do you think it comes from? • Historically, where do all the most powerful societies come from?

  3. Some Historical explanations of Global Inequality… • Racial Superiority • Religious Blessing • Genetic Superiority • This idea is similar to Racial Superiority with the added notion of ‘scientific’ evidence

  4. Yali’s Question • Why do Europeans have so much cargo and New Guineans have so little? • Asked another way… • Why is there so much inequality in the World?

  5. Jared Diamond’s solution • Geography • The advantage does not lie with the people in the more powerful societies, but rather with wherethese societies developed. • According to Diamond, where you lived could give you an enormous advantage

  6. The Collision at Cajamarca • How big an advantage are we talking about? • At Cajamarca (1532) 168 Spaniards with 62 horses and 12 guns defeated more than 80,000 trained soldiers of the Inca Army • The Incas suffered some 2,000 dead, 5,000 captured (including the Emperor Atahualpa) and the scattering of the Imperial Army • The Spaniards suffered zero dead and just one wounded

  7. Diamond began his investigation by going back to when inequality was non-existent • 12,000 years ago human beings populated Eurasia, Africa, North America, South America, Australia and Oceania • All human beings were hunter-gatherers, living in small nomadic bands using just simple stone tools

  8. What is Hunting and Gathering? • It has two distinct components… • Most calories and nutrients are gathered from wild plant species while traveling nomadically after just a couple of hours of work • These nutrients are supplemented by animal protein acquired through occasionally successful hunting • Hunter Gatherers lived in very small groups

  9. 10,000 years ago some societies began to gradually adopt agriculture • Only three regions are known to have developed agriculture independently • Mesopotamia (8,000 BCE) • China (7,000 BCE) • The Peruvian Andes (3,000 BCE) • All other examples of agriculture were derived from these three through the process of Cultural Diffusion

  10. What is Cultural Diffusion? • It has two distinct components… • A cultural idea travels from one place to another • The cultural idea is both adopted by the new society but also adapted • Why does it matter? • Are there modern examples of Cultural Diffusion?

  11. Why pursue Agriculture? • Agriculture requires much more work than Hunting and Gathering • Agriculture provides much more food security than Hunting and Gathering • Agriculture led to… • Fewer periods of malnutrition and starvation • Excess food that could be stored • Larger and healthier populations

  12. The challenges of Agriculture • Only certain crops lent themselves to domestication • Grasses with… • Large seeds (more calories) • Kernels that could be dried and would not spoil • Kernels that would not germinate when stored • Just 56 varieties exist in the world (<1% of all grasses)

  13. Why Eurasia? • Of 56 qualified species, 5 are immensely superior to all others (Emmer and Einkorn wheat, Barley, Rice and Maize) • 39 (with 4 superior grains) were present in Eurasia • Just 5 (with 1 superior grain) were present in Mesoamerica • Just 4 were present in Sub-Saharan Africa • Just 4 were present in North America • Just 2 were present in South America • Just 2 were present in Australia

  14. Why pursue domestication of animals? • After domesticating plants, human beings sought to domesticate animals • Domesticated animals provided protein (both milk and meat), hides and furs, fertilizer, fibrous material, muscle power and efficient transportation

  15. Which Animals work? • Candidates must be herbivores, have a high growth rate, be capable of captive breeding, not be nasty, not be skittish and have a strong social hierarchy • Only 14 such animals (over 100 pounds) existed in the ancient world • The Big Five: Sheep, Goats, Cattle, Pigs, Horses • The Lesser Nine: Arabian and Bactrian Camels, Water Buffaloes, Mithun and Zebu, Donkeys, Reindeer, Yaks and Llamas

  16. Why Eurasia • Of 148 species of large herbivores, just 14 satisfy all the necessary criteria • 72 are native to Eurasia, 13 were domesticated (including all the ‘Big Five’) • 51 are native to Sub-Saharan Africa, none were domesticated • 24 are native to the Americas (North and South America), just 1 was domesticated (the Llama) • 1 is native to Australia, it was not domesticated

  17. Continental Axes Continental Axes

  18. Why Eurasia? • Only Eurasia has an east-west Axis (fostering cultural diffusion) • Only Eurasia lies mostly in the temperate zone • Eurasia had the greatest number, variety and best potential crops • Eurasia had the greatest number, variety and best potential animals for domestication

  19. Why does Agriculture matter? • Agriculture requires record-keeping which requires the development of writing and mathematics • Surplus food allows for the development of specialized workers • Agriculture leads to cities and technology! • Larger societies (more food means more people) require more complex systems of governance

  20. Disease as Power • As populations grew (due to agriculture) and… • People increasingly lived with large numbers of animals (due to domestication) and… • These many people mingled with the feces of these many animals… • Countless virulent diseases developed • Societies that did not have large populations and large number of domesticated animals were at a disease disadvantage

  21. Cajamarca Continued • In 1492, when Columbus arrived in Hispaniola (modern Haiti and the Dominican Republic), the island had roughly 1 million residents • By 1600, the native population was less than 10,000 (a 99% death rate) • 80% - 95% of the native populations of the Americas died in the first 2 centuries after contact • This represents a genocide 20 times more deadly than the Holocaust

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