文本记录English

anthropologist reviews sapiens: a brief history of EUROPEAN civilization :/

21m 2s4,144 字数616 segmentsEnglish

完整文本记录

0:00

i've been avoiding reading this book for

0:01

years now but

0:03

i realized that i can't keep hiding

0:05

anymore and i need to face my fears and

0:07

just do the damn thing

0:12

hello everyone my name is maya and i am

0:14

joined once again with my gorilla

0:16

companion harambe and today we're going

0:18

to be reviewing a book that has been

0:19

living in my head rent free for the past

0:22

three to four years

0:24

sapiens by yuval noah harari now i've

0:27

spent the past four years of my life

0:28

learning about anthropology human

0:30

history human evolution human genetics

0:32

human anatomy basically all things human

0:36

hence my channel and all my videos and

0:39

i'd be lying if most of my friends

0:42

hadn't at some point asked me what my

0:44

opinions were on this book and what i

0:46

thought about it as an anthropologist i

0:48

initially tried reading it last year

0:50

because i thought it'd be interesting

0:51

but i eventually just gave up and put it

0:53

down because i was starting to get

0:54

really frustrated at some of the

0:56

arguments that the author was trying to

0:57

make but i decided that i didn't give it

0:59

a fair shot so this year i decided to

1:02

read it again thoroughly and before

1:04

anyone comes at me i know i'm like years

1:07

late with this review the book initially

1:09

came out in 2014 like with almost

1:11

everything i am very fashionably late to

1:14

this but i still think this book is

1:16

relevant to a lot of topics and

1:18

discourse about the field of

1:19

anthropology human evolution and history

1:22

today and a lot of influential people

1:23

like obama and bill gates say that this

1:25

book is amazing it's brilliant it's

1:28

eye-opening so i figure i'd give it

1:31

another critical read as you can see

1:33

i've taken some notes and i took my time

1:35

to read this book it's a pretty hefty

1:36

book it's around 450 pages i'm going to

1:40

start with the things that i liked about

1:41

the book and then afterwards talk about

1:43

the things that i didn't like about the

1:44

book for those of you that don't know

1:46

sapiens is basically kind of like a

1:48

brief history of humankind it starts off

1:50

with

1:51

how we evolved and how we went on to

1:54

conquer the world and you know migrate

1:56

out of africa

1:58

and how we created stone tools to

2:01

talking about how language came to be

2:03

the cognitive revolution and how our

2:05

brains have basically expanded over the

2:07

course of our evolution to discussing

2:10

humanistic ideas like liberalism talking

2:13

about the advent of religion

2:15

christianity islam judaism it also goes

2:19

into capitalism and communism and

2:21

discourses about economy to finally

2:24

getting us to a present day where he

2:25

talks about where science is going in

2:27

the future the meaning of life happiness

2:30

as well as what's next for homo sapiens

2:32

now let's get into what i actually

2:34

appreciated about the book as an

2:36

anthropologist and primarily a human

2:38

evolutionary biologist i am more

2:41

familiar with certain aspects of the

2:42

book than others where my expertise

2:44

starts to kind of fall off a cliff is

2:47

when it comes to different aspects of

2:49

human history that i probably haven't

2:51

really gone into detail in since high

2:53

school that being said i actually really

2:55

liked how he talked about how capitalism

2:57

shaped the world and how the economy

3:00

shaped different wars and battles that

3:02

occurred throughout history i

3:04

specifically enjoyed how he talked about

3:06

how the stock market came to be

3:07

investing in companies uh he talked

3:10

about like the mississippi crisis and

3:11

france and how that like devastated the

3:13

french economy how the dutch relied on

3:16

paying back loans with interest to

3:19

finance their imperial exports how these

3:22

same loans negatively affected the

3:24

spanish as someone that knows relatively

3:26

little about economics i think it's

3:28

really interesting to explore history

3:30

from an economic lens to see how money

3:33

and finances change the course of events

3:36

in history as we know it so i thought

3:38

that was really interesting i like how

3:40

we touched upon the awful treatment of

3:42

animals and slaughter houses and factory

3:44

farms and how we're basically braiding

3:47

these animals to just constantly produce

3:50

milk or separating mothers from their

3:52

children putting these animals in these

3:54

awful conditions as a vegetarian it

3:56

really resonated with me when he

3:58

acknowledged the harm and suffering that

4:00

we have placed on millions of farm

4:03

animals today and the effect that's

4:05

having on our environment i also really

4:07

enjoyed the discussion on happiness at

4:09

the end when he talked about what

4:11

defines happiness and kind of like how

4:14

to even go about measuring happiness

4:16

harare brings up buddhism and points out

4:18

that buddhism kind of focuses on instead

4:21

of chasing these feelings and chasing

4:23

these like euphoric highs and lows just

4:25

to kind of accept that life is just

4:28

cycles of suffering and happiness and to

4:30

just get used to feeling and

4:32

experiencing those things instead of

4:33

trying to chase those highs and lows i

4:36

also really enjoyed when he explained

4:37

how money came to be how coinage came to

4:40

be how it was something that we all had

4:42

to kind of believe in uh as a universal

4:45

concept it was almost religious in the

4:47

sense where people had to believe in

4:48

like a higher order of things so that

4:50

they could conduct business or pay for

4:52

services or do whatever they needed to

4:53

do it's things like these that you never

4:55

think about that you just kind of take

4:57

for granted and while i already knew a

4:58

lot about how written language came to

5:00

be i still thought it was really cool

5:02

how he touched upon how written language

5:04

evolved as a way to keep track of

5:06

certain stocks of certain things or

5:08

inventories and such and how he talked

5:11

about the ancient sumerians and the use

5:13

of written written language to keep

5:14

track of their inventories finally i

5:16

thought that he had a kind of nuanced

5:18

take on british imperialism i have a lot

5:20

of opinions about british imperialism

5:22

that could probably warrant like an

5:24

hour-long video about it but i thought

5:26

it was really interesting when he talked

5:28

about how in a sense british colonies

5:30

have kind of benefited from british

5:32

imperialism as horrible as it was and it

5:34

was horrible these colonies ended up

5:37

adopting a lot of democratic and liberal

5:40

doctrines from imperialism that they

5:42

probably wouldn't have otherwise kept

5:44

okay okay

5:50

now let's get into the issues with

5:52

sapiens because oh boy are there some

5:55

issues with this book honestly the first

5:57

half when he's talking about our

5:59

evolution is kind of hard for me to sit

6:01

through because it kind of frustrates me

6:03

as someone who spent the last four years

6:04

of my life studying our evolution harare

6:06

gets a lot of things right but he also

6:08

oversimplifies and overgeneralizes a lot

6:11

and this frustrates me on page five he

6:14

says our nearest loving relatives

6:16

include chimpanzees gorillas and

6:17

orangutans the chimpanzees are the

6:19

closest just six million years ago a

6:21

single female ape had two daughters one

6:23

became the ancestor of all chimpanzees

6:25

the other is their own grandmother this

6:27

is not what evolution looks like and

6:30

this is actually a huge issue because in

6:32

my debates with people that don't

6:34

believe in evolution they always bring

6:36

up the point that it's impossible for a

6:38

chimpanzee to just give birth to a human

6:40

and this paragraph basically essentially

6:43

is trying to say that it's trying to say

6:45

that oh just one random day six million

6:47

years ago a female chimpanzee gave birth

6:50

to two people one was a human and one

6:52

was a chimpanzee and this is such a

6:54

flawed view of our evolution that i

6:56

don't even know where to start with this

6:58

first of all this is not how evolution

7:00

works there's two types of evolution

7:02

macroevolution and microevolution

7:04

macroevolution is the kind of evolution

7:05

that takes place over hundreds of

7:07

thousands of years and saying something

7:09

as simplistic as a chimpanzee just gave

解锁更多

免费注册以访问高级功能

互动查看器

观看带有同步字幕、可调节叠加层和完整播放控制的视频。

免费注册以解锁

AI 摘要

获取由 AI 立即生成的视频内容摘要、要点和结论。

免费注册以解锁

翻译

一键将字幕翻译成 100 多种语言。以任何格式下载。

免费注册以解锁

思维导图

将字幕可视化为交互式思维导图。一目了然地了解结构。

免费注册以解锁

与字幕聊天

提出关于视频内容的问题。直接从字幕中获取由 AI 驱动的答案。

免费注册以解锁

从您的字幕中获得更多

免费注册并解锁交互式查看器、AI 摘要、翻译、思维导图等。无需信用卡。