What's Hot?
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ Prison Release Date Moved Forward...
Grammy Awards Add Asian Pop And Latin Song...
British Council Reinforces Creative Sector Support as Film...
Ed Sheeran Announces Planned Break From Music To...
Veteran Hollywood Actor William Smithers Dies At 98
Diddy Scores Legal Victory As Dawn Richard’s Lawsuit...
Iboku Leaders Renew Push For Bakassi Reclamation
Congo’s Viral Leopard Suit Is Inspiring a Fashion...
Njideka Akunyili Crosby Paints First Official Portrait Of...
African Film Festival Returns To Dallas Amid World...
  • Home
  • Arts & Exhibitions
  • Culture & Festivals
    • Culture Africana
    • Culture People
  • Fashion & Lifestyle
    • Music, Movies & More
  • News
    • Travel News
  • Opinion
    • Reviews (The Critics)
  • TCN Literati
  • Tourism & Hospitality
The Culture Newspaper
Reviews (The Critics)

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari

by The Culture Newspaper January 15, 2020
by The Culture Newspaper January 15, 2020

Human beings (members of the genus Homo) have existed for about 2.4m years. Homo sapiens, our own wildly egregious species of great apes, has only existed for 6% of that time – about 150,000 years. So a book whose main title is Sapiens shouldn’t be subtitled “A Brief History of Humankind”. It’s easy to see why Yuval Noah Harari devotes 95% of his book to us as a species: self-ignorant as we are, we still know far more about ourselves than about other species of human beings, including several that have become extinct since we first walked the Earth. The fact remains that the history of sapiens – Harari’s name for us – is only a very small part of the history of humankind.

Can its full sweep be conveyed in one fell swoop – 400 pages? Not really; it’s easier to write a brief history of time – all 14bn years – and Harari also spends many pages on our present and possible future rather than our past. But the deep lines of the story of sapiens are fairly uncontentious, and he sets them out with verve.
Advertisement

For the first half of our existence we potter along unremarkably; then we undergo a series of revolutions. First, the “cognitive” revolution: about 70,000 years ago, we start to behave in far more ingenious ways than before, for reasons that are still obscure, and we spread rapidly across the planet. About 11,000 years ago we enter on the agricultural revolution, converting in increasing numbers from foraging (hunting and gathering) to farming. The “scientific revolution” begins about 500 years ago. It triggers the industrial revolution, about 250 years ago, which triggers in turn the information revolution, about 50 years ago, which triggers the biotechnological revolution, which is still wet behind the ears. Harari suspects that the biotechnological revolution signals the end of sapiens: we will be replaced by bioengineered post-humans, “amortal” cyborgs, capable of living forever.

This is one way to lay things out. Harari embeds many other momentous events, most notably the development of language: we become able to think sharply about abstract matters, cooperate in ever larger numbers, and, perhaps most crucially, gossip. There is the rise of religion and the slow overpowering of polytheisms by more or less toxic monotheisms. Then there is the evolution of money and, more importantly, credit. There is, connectedly, the spread of empires and trade as well as the rise of capitalism.

Harari swashbuckles through these vast and intricate matters in a way that is – at its best – engaging and informative. It’s a neat thought that “we did not domesticate wheat. It domesticated us.” There was, Harari says, “a Faustian bargain between humans and grains” in which our species “cast off its intimate symbiosis with nature and sprinted towards greed and alienation”. It was a bad bargain: “the agricultural revolution was history’s biggest fraud”. More often than not it brought a worse diet, longer hours of work, greater risk of starvation, crowded living conditions, greatly increased susceptibility to disease, new forms of insecurity and uglier forms of hierarchy. Harari thinks we may have been better off in the stone age, and he has powerful things to say about the wickedness of factory farming, concluding with one of his many superlatives: “modern industrial agriculture might well be the greatest crime in history”.

READ More  ‘Eyimofe (This Is My Desire)’ Review: This Tale of Would-Be Nigerian Migrants Is a Knockout

He accepts the common view that the fundamental structure of our emotions and desires hasn’t been touched by any of these revolutions: “our eating habits, our conflicts and our sexuality are all a result of the way our hunter-gatherer minds interact with our current post-industrial environment, with its mega-cities, airplanes, telephones and computers … Today we may be living in high-rise apartments with over-stuffed refrigerators, but our DNA still thinks we are in the savannah.” He gives a familiar illustration – our powerful desires for sugar and fat have led to the widespread availability of foods that are primary causes of unhealthiness and ugliness. The consumption of pornography is another good example. It’s just like overeating: if the minds of pornography addicts could be seen as bodies, they would look just like the grossly obese.

At one point Harari claims that “the leading project of the scientific revolution” is the Gilgamesh Project (named after the hero of the epic who set out to destroy death): “to give humankind eternal life” or “amortality”. He is sanguine about its eventual success. But amortality isn’t immortality, because it will always be possible for us to die by violence, and Harari is plausibly sceptical about how much good it will do us. As amortals, we may become hysterically and disablingly cautious (Larry Niven develops the point nicely in his description of the “Puppeteers” in the Ringworld science fiction novels). The deaths of those we love may become far more terrible. We may grow weary of all things under the sun – even in heaven (see the last chapter of Julian Barnes’s A History of the World in 10½ Chapters). We may come to agree with JRR Tolkien’s elves, who saw mortality as a gift to human beings that they themselves lacked. We may come to feel what Philip Larkin felt: “Beneath it all, desire of oblivion runs.”

READ More  I Told Them… review | Not the grand statement Burna Boy wishes it was

Even if we put all these points aside, there’s no guarantee that amortality will bring greater happiness. Harari draws on well-known research that shows that a person’s happiness from day to day has remarkably little to do with their material circumstances. Certainly money can make a difference – but only when it lifts us out of poverty. After that, more money changes little or nothing. Certainly a lottery winner is lifted by her luck, but after about 18 months her average everyday happiness reverts to its old level. If we had an infallible “happyometer”, and toured Orange County and the streets of Kolkata, it’s not clear that we would get consistently higher readings in the first place than in the second.

This point about happiness is a persistent theme in Sapiens. When Arthur Brooks (head of the conservative American Enterprise Institute) made a related point in the New York Times in July, he was criticised for trying to favour the rich and justify income inequality. The criticism was confused, for although current inequalities of income are repellent, and harmful to all, the happiness research is well confirmed. This doesn’t, however, prevent Harari from suggesting that the lives lived by sapiens today may be worse overall than the lives they lived 15,000 years ago.

Much of Sapiens is extremely interesting, and it is often well expressed. As one reads on, however, the attractive features of the book are overwhelmed by carelessness, exaggeration and sensationalism. Never mind his standard and repeated misuse of the saying “the exception proves the rule” (it means that exceptional or rare cases test and confirm the rule, because the rule turns out to apply even in those cases). There’s a kind of vandalism in Harari’s sweeping judgments, his recklessness about causal connections, his hyper-Procrustean stretchings and loppings of the data. Take his account of the battle of Navarino. Starting from the fact that British investors stood to lose money if the Greeks lost their war of independence, Harari moves fast: “the bond holders’ interest was the national interest, so the British organised an international fleet that, in 1827, sank the main Ottoman flotilla in the battle of Navarino. After centuries of subjugation, Greece was finally free.” This is wildly distorted – and Greece was not then free. To see how bad it is, it’s enough to look at the wikipedia entry on Navarino.

Harari hates “modern liberal culture”, but his attack is a caricature and it boomerangs back at him. Liberal humanism, he says, “is a religion”. It “does not deny the existence of God”; “all humanists worship humanity”; “a huge gulf is opening between the tenets of liberal humanism and the latest findings of the life sciences”. This is silly. It’s also sad to see the great Adam Smith drafted in once again as the apostle of greed. Still, Harari is probably right that “only a criminal buys a house … by handing over a suitcase of banknotes” – a point that acquires piquancy when one considers that about 35% of all purchases at the high end of the London housing market are currently being paid in cash.

READ More  Man Of God: Parenting, Personal Choices And Parable Of The Prodigal Son

Source: TheGuardian

0
FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinWhatsappEmail
The Culture Newspaper

previous post
British-Nigerian Actress, Cynthia Erivo, Nominated for Oscars’ Best Actress
next post
Hero set to shine at Pan African Film and Arts Festival

You may also like

Funmilayo: Another Look At The Faults And Foibles

June 25, 2024

Iwájú: Nigerian Disney Show Flawed But Delightful –...

March 1, 2024

Afolayan Unveils Official Poster for Netflix Series, ‘Anikulapo:...

January 28, 2024

Breath Of Fresh Air With ‘Breath Of Life’

January 17, 2024

Delving Into The 2023 Winner Of The Booker...

January 16, 2024

Booker Prize winner ‘Prophet Song’ is a prophetic...

December 1, 2023

Sira….Auteur Narrative Navigates The Sahel To Rabat

November 21, 2023

Still On Jada Pinkett Smith, A ‘Worthy’ Appraisal

October 19, 2023

A Nigerian Revenge Thriller Is Dominating Netflix’s Worldwide...

October 5, 2023

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Black Book’...

September 28, 2023

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Recent Posts

  • Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ Prison Release Date Moved Forward Again
  • Grammy Awards Add Asian Pop And Latin Song Categories
  • British Council Reinforces Creative Sector Support as Film Lab Africa Enters Production
  • Ed Sheeran Announces Planned Break From Music To Focus On Family
  • Veteran Hollywood Actor William Smithers Dies At 98

Sponsored

Recent Posts

  • Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ Prison Release Date Moved Forward Again

    June 17, 2026
  • Grammy Awards Add Asian Pop And Latin Song Categories

    June 17, 2026
  • British Council Reinforces Creative Sector Support as Film Lab Africa Enters Production

    June 17, 2026

Categories

  • Arts & Exhibitions
  • Culture & Festivals
  • Culture Africana
  • Culture People
  • Fashion & Lifestyle
  • Food
  • Music, Movies & More
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Photo News
  • Reviews (The Critics)
  • TCN Interview
  • TCN Literati
  • Tourism & Hospitality
  • Travel News
  • Travel Trends
  • Travelogue
  • What's Hot?
  • World Culture

Connect with us

Connect with us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

@2025 - The Culture Newspaper. All Right Reserved. Maintained by Freelart

The Culture Newspaper
  • Home
  • Arts & Exhibitions
  • Culture & Festivals
    • Culture Africana
    • Culture People
  • Fashion & Lifestyle
    • Music, Movies & More
  • News
    • Travel News
  • Opinion
    • Reviews (The Critics)
  • TCN Literati
  • Tourism & Hospitality