About the Book
How Humans Evolve from Insignificant Apes to Become the Rulers of the World
The must-read summary of "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind," by Yuval Noah Harari.
In Sapiens, Professor Yuval Noah Harari focuses on the three great revolutions of human history: Cognitive, Agricultural, and Scientific. He presents a hypothesis about how Homo sapiens transforms from an animal of no significance 70,000 years ago to become the rulers of the Earth.
Earlier human species such as Homo neanderthalensis in Europe and Homo erectus in Asia had climate and environmental adaptations that sapiens did not have. The Cognitive Revolution between 70,000 and 30,000 years ago enabled the sapiens to form elaborate cultures and communicate in fiction. Myths, religions, moral codes, nations, corporations, and money are fiction that shapes human societies, allowing them to speak the same language and share the same customs, beliefs, rituals, and dreams. Fiction also allowed them to cooperate in groups, giving them a military and security advantage and encouraging specialization which eventually gave them a technological advantage.
This book tells the story of how these three revolutions have affected humans since the start of the Cognitive Revolution. It challenges everything we thought we knew about being human.
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Tags: animism, Aztec Empire, Babylonian Empire, Qin Empire, biology, bobobos, capitalism, chimpanzees, China, Roman Empire, Christianity, Code of Hammurabi, Egypt, communities, culture, Confusianism, cooperation, cognitive revolution, ecology, elephants, empire, Europe, evolution, fictions, food chain, genetics, gold, happiness, hierarchy, history, homo sapiens, humans, language, mathematics, Ming Empire, natural selection, domestication, agricultural revolution, scientific revolution, religion, Qin dyneasty, Qing dynasty, quipu, Replacement Theory, race, sex, gender, script, slavery, social structure, South America, Spain, Song Empire, Sumer, trade, women, men, hunter-gatherer, foragers, farmers, Wranfel Island, Arctic Ocean, Stone Age, taxes, mythology, archaeology,
About the Author: Lee Tang is a retired executive of a major global insurance company. Prior to his retirement, he has worked as an actuary, a risk officer and a chief financial officer for several major insurance organizations in the United States, Canada, and Taiwan. To learn more about Lee and his work, visit his website and blog at https: //lmtpress.wordpress.com. You can reach him by email at leetang888@gmail.com