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Nature's Greatest Success
Robert N. Spengler
其他書名
How Plants Evolved to Exploit Humanity
出版
Univ of California Press
, 2025-05-06
主題
History / World
History / Civilization
Science / General
Science / Natural History
Social Science / Archaeology
Social Science / Human Geography
Social Science / Agriculture & Food
Technology & Engineering / Agriculture / General
ISBN
0520405838
9780520405837
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=q0Y_EQAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The 15,000-year story of how grass seduced humanity into being its unwitting labor force—and the science behind it.
Domesticated crops were not human creations, and agriculture was not simply invented. As Robert N. Spengler shows, domestication was the result of an evolutionary process in which people played a role only unwittingly and as actors in a numberless cast that spanned the plant and animal kingdoms.
Nature's Greatest Success
is the first book to bring together recent scientific discoveries and fascinating ongoing research to provide a systematic account of not only
how
agriculture really developed but
why
.
Through fifteen chapters, this book dives deep into the complex processes that drove domestication and the various roles that plants and animals, including humans, played in bringing about those changes. At the intersection of popular history, archaeology, and evolutionary biology,
Nature's Greatest Success
offers a revolutionary account of humanity not at the apex of nature but deeply embedded in the natural world and the evolutionary processes that continue to guide it even today.