It is still in progress and may yet finish us all off. Then came a long process of unifying mankind and colonising the Earth until, finally, the scientific revolution began about 500 years ago. About 70,000 years ago, the cognitive revolution kickstarted our history, and about 12,000 years ago the agricultural revolution speeded it up. Harari organises humankind around four different milestones. The book’s surface is brilliantly clear, witty and erudite but its underlying message is dark. Instead, it offers a bravura retelling of the human story seasoned with more personal reflections on man’s tenancy of the planet. Was the invention of cooking the reason for man’s evolutionary success or was our facility for culture the key? Was the progress of humanity driven by kindness or by warfare and aggression? Did our earliest ancestors live in promiscuous communes, as depicted in Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jethá’s bestselling Sex at Dawn? Or in respectable monogamy, as argued in Lynn Saxon’s less successful Sex at Dusk? One of the charms of Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens is that it avoids such simplistic explanations. W here do we come from? Our insatiable curiosity about our origins has provoked a raft of different answers to that question.
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