Yuval Noah Hurari (2011) Sapiens A Brief History of Humankind.

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I bought this book about two years ago, started reading it and put it in a wicker basket at the side of the couch. It got covered by other books, but like yeast it worked its way to the surface and into my consciousness and left its thumb-print on me, which will fade, indeed, has faded, because I’m pretty dumb. By now, of course, Yuval Noah Harari has a follow-up book out, which I also intend to buy (and leave in a wicker basket by the side of the couch).

You might want to look at the growth and timeline of ‘An Animal of No Significance’ in the first chapter and flash forward a couple of million years, jump another 70 000 years and 466 pages later  ‘The End of Homo Sapiens, Afterword: The Animal that Became a God’, or you might want to watch a few episodes of Star Trek, because really its always about us and them. A puny species learned to walk upright, make flint tools, gossip about their neighbours and wipe out all other species. We’re getting pretty good at it now. We started with fire and domesticated animals and the animals domesticated us. Fire, physics, chemistry, biology and back to DNA and fire and blood again.

From hunter gatherers with little impact on the earth

[to] an orgy of reckless consumption…Much of the vaunted material wealth that shields us from disease and famine was accumulated at the expense of laboratory monkeys, dairy cows and conveyor-belt chickens. Over the last two-centuries tens of billions of them have been subjected to a regime of industrial exploitation whose cruelty has no precedent in the annals of planet Earth. If we accept a mere tenth of what animal-rights activists are claiming, then modern industrial agriculture might well be the greatest crime in history. When  evaluating global happiness, it is wrong to count the happiness only of the upper classes, of Europeans, or men. Perhaps it is also wrong to consider only the happiness of humans.      

Bioethics asks ‘what is it forbidden to do’?

The answer is we’ve already done it and likely to do so again. Man is not to be trusted. We need more Spocks and Captain Kirks to rescue mankind from evolving into a giant hamburger that eats itself, throws up, doesn’t leave a tip, and laughs at its own jokes, or is that just me? 

Comments

If us lot do spontaneously combust it leaves more growing space for the trees, birds, rats, fishes etc.

But I want us to find our way forward....

How could an animal 'learn to walk upright'? Such an evolution sounds more like Star Trek than science. And mutation of genes wouldn't do it either. All the "humanoid" skeleton-bits-fossils found have turned out to be ape, other animal (eg pig), human or fraud.

It also seems much more popular to rant about the crimes of 'all mankind' than to think of our own lack of loving kindness day by day. And with concern about treatment of animals, where is the concern about treatment of unborn babies? Rhiannon

 

I want to find a way forward too. I guess the best thing to do is read the book for yourself Rhiannon and leave a review. I believe in evolution. To be honest I don't really care about animals that much. My partner gets dewy-eyed over dogs and cats. But there's no getting away from the fact we as a race are destroying the planet. The most 'Christian' place on earth is America that elected the moron's moron as President. He swears by the bible and believes it's all the same kind of liberal crap as global warming. I've more faith in the Klingons. I'm not sure what point you are making about unborn babies? That doesn't come up in this book. Trump and his rich crony friends, of course, are trying to repeal the rights of poor women to obtain a legal abortion. I'm neither female, nor American. This doesn't effect me, but it does affect me. I find it hypocritical and nasty. But I'd encourage you to review this book. I'd a Catholic upbringing and admire Christ, even if he didn't exist his values and 'life' are beautiful. But I'm not saint.   

 

Hi Celt, I personally certainly don’t ‘believe’ in evolution, and it more and more seems to be a convenient con for the masses rather than scientific evidential or theoretical sense.

But to answer your question about babies, I mentioned it in connection with the concern that you had mentioned in your review, about treatment of animals. You here also refer to it in assuming their should be legal rights of abortion – unborn babies aren’t just lumps of flesh, but are living and getting near (or there already) survivability outside the womb. I know there are tremendous difficulties faced by many, many pregnant women, but also, many, many suffer physical and emotional damage they hadn’t realised would happen because of being encouraged that the solution lies in an abortion. It can seem such a neat answer, but that is deceptive both for women and the unborn children. So, with concern about treatment of animals, I think we should be aware that these developing, getting ready for birth, babies should not be just regarded as legally destructable material. (and there are many who would love to be able to adopt such a child if allowed finish development and be born) Rhiannon

 

I had an abortion on the NHS when I was 44. No-one coerced me. I had one child of 11 and one of 3.  I could not face going back and forward to the primary school gate when I was over fifty. My decision damaged my recent relationship with the man but 16 years on we are both good friends.

I had started taking the pill but was probably one or two days short of the time it needed to be fully effective.

I do not regret my choice.  Every child should be wanted.

I don't think we are that far apart Rhannon. I'd much rather give money to starving people than the donkey sanctuary and am often amused by the British love of all things animal. And of course I'd love all children to be brought into the world and have loving parents. But that isn't going to happen. I'd much rather women that demand an abortion get an abortion. And from rich people to stop stealing money from the poor to pay for their over-inflated lifestyes. Hurari talks about a digital divide with those that can afford implants and biogenetics become more like supermen (and a sprinkling of superwormen). Resources are finite. Human are wiping out all other species. Fling in global warming and we have global problems. In my usual hpyerbolic way I said the Third World War has started, but we've just not got around to acknowledging it yet. But it is here and it is now.