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December 2016 - Wizards, Aliens
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By Betsy , co-mod · 5 posts · 69 views
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November 2016 - Neurotribes
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By Betsy , co-mod · 9 posts · 107 views
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What Members Thought

This is an excellent book about the history of humans, covering all aspects; evolution, anthropology, geography, psychology, religion, ideologies, and the future of humans. Physically, the book is beautiful; the glossy paper makes it heavy as well. What really makes the book interesting is the unique points of view that the author, Yuval Harari, brings to life.
For example, early in the book, Harari mentions that chimps and sapiens (humans) can only organize in groups of up to 150, without organi ...more
For example, early in the book, Harari mentions that chimps and sapiens (humans) can only organize in groups of up to 150, without organi ...more

Very well read by Derek Perkins, I highly recommend this book to everyone. Whatever your beliefs, you'll find plenty of food for thought in this relatively brief outline of our history from a middling animal to whatever the hell we are now. It's about 15 hours long, but never dragged a bit. I made excuses to listen every minute that I could & even downloaded the ebook to reread sections for clarification & to ponder a bit more at length. I highly recommend this method. (I'm putting this section
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Interesting ideas, but the writer's heavy bias is evident. I couldn't finish it. Also, the use of another book that is conjecture (though Jared Diamond is always fascinating!) as a source is more of a rant than new ideas. I enjoyed his theories about early humans, but once he got into agriculture, I had to stop reading. Read this for the first 20%, then read Guns, Germs, and Steel for a fascinating theory about people in power.
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Apr 23, 2019
Kathleen (itpdx)
rated it
really liked it
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review of another edition
Shelves:
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I like books that look at something differently from the commonly accepted point of view. Harari does this with human history. He claims that what has made homo sapiens “successful” is our ability to imagine, tell stories, collectively believe in things that don’t objectively exist. He argues that three of these things are money, nations and ideologies. He says that because Sapiens can function with these constructs we are able to cooperate in very large groups (essentially world-wide, at this p
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May 01, 2018
Scott Flicker
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Jun 20, 2020
Chris Stanford
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