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  1. 得分
    籃板
    助攻
    本季6.3
    1.5
    3.2
    終場
    4月 14日@塞爾蒂克
    L
    122 - 132
  2. One of the best-known arguments was popularized by Jared Diamond in Guns, Germs, and Steel(Diamond 1997). Diamond noted that China has a smooth coastline, while Europe has an indented coastline, with many peninsulas that were homes to independent countries.

  3. "a briefer, darker, and more insightful assessment of our civilization culture than the much more famous book that came out a few months later, Jared Diamond's Collapse. A Short History of Progress summarizes and analyzes six spectacular civilizational collapses from throughout our history, and reads us the riot act about what we need to do now ...

  4. This adds to the long-standing discussion of capitalism and work in ephemera (e.g. Beverungen et al., 2013; Butler et al., 2011; Chertkovskaya et al., 2013; Chertkovskaya et al., 2016). Many authors also address another theme that has been actively pursued by the journal – that of alternative organizing (e.g. Graziano and Trogal, 2019 ...

  5. And they quote Jared Diamond and others to that effect in chapter 1. But what the authors forget as they go down this dead-end path of seeing hierarchy as a random choice disconnected from conditions, is that one of the powers of human beings is that we have the power to choose to shape and change the conditions that we live in – at least ...

  6. The eight Eurocentric historians are Max Weber, Lynn White Jr., Robert Brenner, Eric L. Jones, Michael Mann, John A. Hall, Jared Diamond and David Landes. With his emphasis on European rationality, Weber is a forerunner. Although he enjoys enormous

  7. 2022年8月6日 · But why are such collapses so common, and what generates them? Several books have been published on the subject, including the well known "Collapse" by Jared Diamond (2005), "The collapse of complex societies" by Joseph Tainter (1998) and "The Tipping

  8. "No review touching on collapse can omit some discussion of Jared Diamond’s book Collapse (2005) and the responses it has provoked. It may be taken to represent the public face of collapse that developed through the 1990s and 2000s, in which collapse was seen as primarily an environmentally driven phenomenon (Middleton 2012).