A Brief History Of Humankind - Sapiens
Yuval Noah Harari

Professor Yuval Noah Harari's provocative and enlightening work covers the entire history of mankind, from the ancients to the great and destructive development of psychological, agricultural, and scientific change. Harari explores how modern history has shaped our human society, the animals and plants around us, and our humanity - drawing on insights from biology, anthropology, paleontology, and economics. Harari takes an in-depth look at our history as an animal to help us understand and move forward.
Sapiens is a book that takes us on an amazing journey through human history, from its roots of evolution to the era of capitalism and genetic engineering, and explains why it is so. The book of Harar begins with a solid and fascinating account of the early history of mankind and the emergence of the first human species, which eventually elevated and dominated our species. The rest of the book is about the authors' thoughts and ideas about the human condition, some of which I found to be interesting and exciting, as we all believe in the value of money, but there is one theory that Harari himself puts forward. that treats me like a castle.
Harar, for example, tries to prove that the revolution in agriculture was one of the greatest mistakes in human history. He notes that agriculture gave Homo sapiens a better life, and calls the agricultural revolution "one of the most astonishing scams in history." Indeed, to be viewed as the greatest fraud in history, a development that left farm dwellers far more miserable than their nomadic ancestors who sought food.
Harari, a professor of history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, tries to explain in detail and confirm how Homo sapiens became the world's most endangered species and the only human species. He points out that two to ten million years ago, humans were not the only people on earth, and that many species of animals lived before us and accumulated during our time. In short, he writes, we have changed planet Earth and human cultures in a short period, and with each change, we have become more powerful.
But the fact is that the history of Sapiens, where Yuval calls Noah Harari a species, is a small part of human history. The deep lines of the history of sapiens are undeniable, and Harari defines its verve. Not only is it easy to write a short history of 1.4 billion years, but Harari is using many pages in our present, future, and future.
Many books on human history deal with history and history, but Drs. Yuval Noah Harari broke the mold with this first book, which began about 70,000 years before the advent of modern knowledge. Harari, who graduated with a doctorate in history from Oxford University and is now a professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, writes about the three major changes that propelled Homo sapiens to the top of the food chain and provide a narrative of ontogenic, phylogenetic, and cultural choices. As for Harar (Israeli historian), he has a relatively short period: the last 70,000 years of human history, so his work is undoubtedly difficult.
This fascinating, fairy-tale book takes readers on a fascinating journey through the history of our animal species, as Harari's awesome ingenuity illuminates the greatest success in human history. It is an important study of important, observant sapiens. Mankind's History is a multidisciplinary approach, unlike other literature of its kind that bridges the gap between history, biology, philosophy, and economics in an unprecedented way. This book examines the role that transformational people have played in the global ecosystem and traces the growth of empires. It begins about 70,000 years ago with the advent of modern understanding, combining history with science, re-examining acceptable narratives, linking development with modern concerns, and exploring certain events in the context of big ideas.
Harari is not the first to describe the development of species, but his account is one of the most shocking so far. He cannot explain how gender inequality has changed the course of human history and its predictable causes. A very thoughtful aspect of Sapiens is the authors' question "about the impact of historical changes on human happiness.
All in all, I recommend this book to anyone interested in a fascinating and fascinating look at early human history. It is a biological, intellectual, and economic account of humanity defined by biologists and well-known people, including me, Drs. Yuval Noah Harari, a prominent historian, and philosopher who presented ideas and researched the foundations of human evolution. monkeys in philosophical creations that reflect the purpose of life. Harari’s concept of cognitive change reminded me of David Christian’s concept of a “great story,” in which collective learning and the ability to share, store, and build knowledge that distinguished Homo sapiens from all people and allowed them to succeed.
On the contrary, the revolution in agriculture provided the people with the most nutritious and regular food in our history, enabling us to say goodbye to food and travel regularly. The title of the book, Sapiens, is not, as its subheading indicates, A Brief History of Humanity. For more than 100,000 years, Homo sapiens was one of the many species of humans competing for size.


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