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Ready, aim… best-selling scientist targeted for his ‘dangerous’ views

The behaviour expert says we have much to learn from traditional societies — but that hasn’t stopped critics attacking him

March 8, 2013 11:00
Jared Diamond with a tribesman in Papua New Guinea. The academic backs up his arguments with extensive research in the field (Photo: intellectualrevolution.tv)

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

4 min read

I have spent less than three minutes in the company of Jared Diamond and he assures me that he does not pose a threat to my life.

“I can promise you that I have not made a move to kill you yet. Nor have I detected any move on your part to kill me. But in a traditional society both of us would have made a move to kill each other by now, or else run away,” he says solemnly.

Over a light breakfast in a hotel lounge in central London, the Pulitzer Prize-winning polymath, and popular science writer is talking about his new book The World Until Yesterday. The narrative looks at behavioural differences between human beings in tribal stateless societies, versus those living under the all-powerful bureaucratic system of the nation state.

Diamond’s argument is fairly simple: if states only came into existence 5,400 years ago, and agriculture in the last 11,000, humans have spent much of their time throughout history as wandering nomads. As modern nations are relatively new concepts, we have much to learn from traditional cultures.