Why the West Rules—for Now

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Why the West Rules—for Now Page 90

by Morris, Ian;


  Tell Brak (Syria), 181, 184

  Tell Leilan (Syria), 192, 193, 206

  Temps modernes, Les (journal), 106

  Temujin, 388

  Tenochtitlán, 417, 421, 426, 429, 431–33, 460

  Terracotta Army, 282, 285

  Teshik-Tash (Uzbekistan), 59

  Thailand, 120, 127, 534

  Thebes (Egypt), 193, 194, 215, 219

  Theodora, Empress, 344, 345, 363n

  Theodosius, Emperor, 315, 326

  Three Dynasties Chronology Project, 201, 214

  Thucydides, 268, 296

  Tiananmen Square massacre, 549, 586

  Tibet, 458

  Tierra del Fuego, 139

  Tiglath-Pileser III, King, 245–49, 269, 303, 316, 335, 567

  Tilley, Christopher, 141

  Tinghai (China), 145, 148

  Tokyo, 501n, 503, 523, 524

  population of, 149, 152, 482n

  Tolkien, J.R.R., 53

  Tolstoy, Leo, 113, 284

  Tomyris, Queen of Massagetae, 278

  Tongling (China), 210

  Treasure Fleets, 408, 416, 426, 429

  Treasury Bonds, U.S., 585

  Treatise on Agriculture (Wang Zhen), 379, 420n

  Tripitaka (“Three Baskets” of Buddhist canon), 256

  Trobriand Islands, 133, 137

  Troy, 199, 241

  True Levellers, 452

  Tunisia, 315, 364

  Turkana Boy, 45, 52, 57

  Turkey, 81, 97, 197n, 431, 443–46, 452, 453, 459–61, 528, 605n

  archaeological sites in, 96, 100, 102–103, 105, 123–25

  modernization of, 571

  Turkic peoples, 348, 349, 354–56, 358, 361, 364, 366–67, 372, 567; Ottoman, see Ottomans

  Turkmenistan, 125, 189

  2001: A Space Odyssey (Clarke), 63, 149, 182, 183

  Ugarit (Syria), 216, 217, 220, 225

  Ukraine, 196, 295, 458

  Uluburun (Anatolia), 200

  ’Umar, 351

  Undefeated Sun, 323

  United Arab Emirates, 605n

  United Monarchy, 234

  United Nations, 150, 610

  Food and Agriculture Organization, 601

  Human Development Index, 145–47, 149–50

  Intergovernmental Panel on

  Climate Change (IPCC), 599

  United States, 31, 35, 158, 488, 531, 601n, 604, 605, 612, 634

  carbon emissions of, 18, 538, 609

  China and, 518, 546–47, 585–88, 606

  diseases in, 603

  economy of, 12, 34, 225, 529–31, 535, 540–41, 542, 553, 578, 582, 588, 597, 598, 615

  emigration to, 509, 603

  impact of climate change in, 600

  industrialization in, 510, 521

  Japan and, 10, 534

  military spending in, 548, 631

  neo-evolutionary theory in, 138–39

  nuclear weapons and, 605–606, 608, 616

  September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on, 551

  Soviet Union and, 526, 527, 533–35, 540–42, 550, 580, 616

  technology in, 542, 594, 597, 615

  in Vietnam War, 535

  in World War I, 529

  in World War II, 52, 532, 533, 579

  Universal History (Polybius), 263–64

  Ur (Mesopotamia), 193–94

  Royal Cemetery of, 188–89

  Urartu, 248

  Urban II, Pope, 372

  Uruk (Mesopotamia), 181–88, 190, 192, 194, 203, 206, 207, 210, 223, 229, 562, 610

  Uzbekistan, 59, 366, 606n

  Vagnari (Italy), 273

  Valencia, 438

  Valens, Emperor, 312, 313

  Valerian, Emperor, 310, 328

  Vandals, 313, 315, 316, 345

  Vedas, 137

  Venice, 371, 373, 384, 392, 402, 404, 420n, 427, 429, 431–32, 459

  Venter, Craig, 595, 596

  Verne, Jules, 507, 511

  Vespasian, Emperor, 286

  Viagra, 594

  Victoria, Queen of England, 6, 7, 10–11, 14, 148

  Vienna, Congress of, 489

  Vietnam, 11, 127, 407, 408, 587

  Vietnam War, 106, 140, 141, 502n, 535

  Vikings, 363, 364, 371, 421, 427

  Vinland, 371

  Virgil, 286

  Voltaire, 13, 280, 472–74, 481

  von Däniken, Erich, 182–83, 186, 189, 194, 215, 253, 399, 410, 614n

  Voyage on the Red Sea, The, 273, 275

  Wagner, Lindsay, 594

  Wales, 472n Wal-Mart, 553

  Wang Anshi, 376, 421

  Wang Feng, 18

  Wang Mang, Emperor, 299

  Wang Qirong, 210–11

  Wang Yangming, 426, 453, 473n

  Wang Zhen, 379–80, 420n

  Wanli, Emperor, 442–43

  War and Peace (Tolstoy), 113

  Wardi, al-, 398

  War of the East, 524, 532

  Warring States period, 244n, 264

  War of the West, 486–89, 524, 526, 532, 534, 550

  Waterloo, battle of, 486

  Watt, James, 494–97, 500, 502, 504, 567, 568, 573

  Wayne, John, 18

  Wealth and Poverty of Nations, The (Landes), 17

  weapons, 151, 180, 185, 197, 217, 295, 389

  in China, 305, 374, 380

  nuclear, see nuclear weapons

  high-tech, 548, 591–92, 615–16, 618

  iron and bronze, 128–29, 181, 191, 200, 208, 233–34, 276

  of mass destruction, 605

  prehistoric, 57, 80

  siege, 277

  in World War I, 526; see also guns

  Weber, Max, 136–37

  Wedgwood, Josiah, 498

  Wei (China), 265, 266, 335n

  Weiss, Harvey, 192

  Wellington, Duke of, 486

  Wendi, Emperor, 337, 345, 346, 354

  West Germany, 533, 535

  Wheeler, Brigadier Mortimer, 274–75

  White, Leslie, 148

  Whitney, Eli, 496

  Wilhelm II, Kaiser, 524, 525

  Wilkinson, John (“Iron-Mad”), 495

  William I (“the Conqueror”), King, 194

  William of Orange, 20

  Wire, The (television show), 442

  Woods, Tiger, 594

  Wordsworth, William, 491–92

  World Bank, 547, 603

  World Health Organization, 603–604

  World Trade Organization, 610

  World War I, 65, 133, 526–29, 531, 533, 605

  World War II, 17, 52, 254, 273–75, 526, 531–34, 565, 578, 579, 608

  Wozniak, Steve, 542

  Wright brothers, 510

  Wu (China), 245, 524

  Wu, King, 229–31

  Wudi, Emperor (Han dynasty), 285, 294, 457

  Wudi, Emperor (Liang dynasty), 329

  Wuding, King, 212–15, 220, 221

  Wu Zetian, 340–42, 344, 345, 355, 363n

  Wuzong, Emperor, 375

  Xia dynasty, 205–209, 214, 235, 245

  Xian, Marquis, 251

  Xianbei, 335–36

  Xiandi, Emperor, 302–304

  Xianfeng, Emperor, 10

  Xiangyang (China), 392

  Xiaowen, Emperor, 336, 338, 362

  Xiongnu, 293–95, 298, 299, 301, 303–305, 310, 314, 349, 354

  Xishan (China), 124

  Xishuipo (China), 126

  Xuan, King, 242

  Xuan, Marquis, 251

  Xuanzong, Emperor, 355–57, 359

  Xuchang (China), 79

  Xu Fu, 421n

  Xunzi, 259

  Yahgan people, 139

  Yale University, 30, 192

  Yan (China), 265n

  Yang, Prince, 221

  Yang Guifei, 355–56, 424

  Yangzhou (China), 442

  Yanshi (China), 209

  Yan Wenming, 120, 121

  Yellow Turbans, 302

  Yemen, 349

  Yesugei, 388


  Yih, King, 233

  Yom Kippur/Ramadan conflict, 90

  Yongle, Emperor, 406, 407, 413, 414, 416, 426, 429

  You, King, 242–43, 355

  Younger Dryas, 92–94, 96, 100, 114, 119, 122, 175, 577–78

  Yu, King, 204–208, 214

  Yuan dynasty, 587

  Yuan Shikai, 528

  Yue (China), 524

  Yu Hong, 342

  Yukichi, Fukuzawa, 15

  Zemeckis, Robert, 572

  Zeno, Emperor, 316–17

  Zenobia, Queen, 311

  Zhang Zhuzheng, 442–43

  Zhao, King, 232

  Zhao (China), 265, 266, 279

  Zhaodun, 252–53

  Zheng, King, 266–67

  Zheng (China), 244

  Zhengde, Emperor, 441

  Zheng He, 16, 17, 407, 408, 413, 417, 420n, 426, 429, 433, 589

  Zhengtong, Emperor, 413, 416, 417

  Zhengzhou (China), 209–10, 212

  Zhou, Duke of, 230, 257

  Zhou, Madame, 424, 426

  Zhou dynasty, 214, 221–22, 229–37, 242–45, 250–51, 253, 257, 278, 285, 355, 359n, 369

  Zhoukoudian (China), 51–55, 57, 60, 72, 78, 154, 210n, 211

  Zhou Man, 408, 410, 413

  Zhuangzi, 257–59

  Zhu Xi, 422–24, 426, 453

  Zhu Yuanzhang, 404–405

  Zoroaster, 254n

  Zoroastrianism, 328, 342

  Zuozhuan (commentary on historical documents), 252–53

  *Some people think Chinese sailors even reached the Americas in the fifteenth century, but, as I will try to show in Chapter 8, these claims are probably fanciful. The closest thing to evidence for these imaginary voyages is a map of the world exhibited in Beijing and London in 2006, purporting to be a 1763 copy of a Chinese original drawn in 1418. The map is not only wildly different from all genuine fifteenth-century Chinese maps but is also strikingly like eighteenth- century French world maps, down to details like showing California as an island. Most likely an eighteenth-century Chinese cartographer combined fifteenth-century maps with newly available French maps. The mapmaker probably had no intention of deceiving anyone, but twenty-first-century collectors, eager for sensational discoveries, have happily deceived themselves.

  *Wong left Irvine in 2005, but moved only forty miles, to the University of California’s Los Angeles campus; and Wang had a co-author, James Lee, but he, too, teaches just forty miles from Irvine, at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

  *Academic biology is a vast field; I draw on its ecological/evolutionary end rather than its molecular/cellular end.

  *I use “sociology” as a shorthand term for the social sciences more generally, and draw primarily on those branches that generalize about how all societies work rather than those that focus on differences. This definition cuts across traditional academic distinctions among sociology, anthropology, economics, and political science, and puts great emphasis on areas where biology and the social sciences meet, especially demography and psychology.

  *Geography, like biology and sociology, is a huge and loosely defined field (so loosely defined, in fact, that since the 1940s many universities have decided that it is not an academic discipline at all and have closed their geography departments). I draw more on human/economic geography than on physical geography.

  *What, since the nineteenth century, people have rather confusingly called the “Middle East.”

  *Mesopotamia is the ancient Greek name (literally meaning “between the rivers”) for Iraq. By convention, historians and archaeologists use Mesopotamia for the period before the Arab invasion of 637 CE and Iraq after that date.

  *I borrow this term from the economist Alexander Gerschrenkon (although he used it slightly differently).

  *I present more technical accounts in the appendix to this book and on my website, www.ianmorris.org.

  *The word “ape-man,” with its Tarzan-and-Jane connotations, was much favored in schoolbooks when I was young. Nowadays paleoanthropologists tend to think it condescending, but it seems to me to capture nicely the ambiguities of these prehuman hominins, and is certainly less of a mouthful.

  *In practice they probably jumped a few miles at a time to find good new foraging spots, then stayed put for several years.

  *Although we now normally transliterate the name of the Chinese capital as Beijing, by convention paleoanthropologists still speak of Peking Man.

  *That said, Heidelberg Man did live in Africa as well as Europe. Some paleoanthropologists envisage a European origin followed by a spread back into Africa, but others assume that Heidelberg Man, like Homo habilis and Homo ergaster, evolved in Africa in response to local climate changes, then spread north. Bones rather like Heidelberg Man’s have also been found in China, but that evidence is more disputed.

  *And, of course, an unknown number of hominin species like the Flores hobbits that died out without leaving modern descendants. Another new species was identified in the mountains of central Asia in 2010, and was predictably labeled “the yeti.”

  *One Harvard anthropologist greeted the publication of the Neanderthal genome by suggesting that a mere $32 million investment would allow us to genetically modify modern human DNA and insert it into a chimpanzee cell to yield a genuine Neanderthal baby. The necessary technology is not—yet—available, but even when it is, we might hesitate to apply it; as my Stanford colleague Richard Klein, one of the world’s leading paleoanthropologists, asked a journalist: “Are you going to put [the Neanderthals] in Harvard or in a zoo?”

  *Some isolated groups, like the Flores “hobbits,” possibly survived until recently. When Portuguese sailors reached Flores in the sixteenth century they claimed to have seen tiny, hairy cave dwellers who could barely talk. More than a hundred years have now passed since a sighting has been claimed, but it is said that similar little people still exist on Java. One of their hairs was recently produced, but on testing, its DNA turned out to be fully human. Some anthropologists believe that we will eventually encounter these last relics of premodern humanity in the shrinking Javanese forests. I have to admit I am skeptical.

  †Homo sapiens who stayed in Africa, however, did not interbreed with Neanderthals, and modern Africans have no Neanderthal DNA. The implications of this have yet to be explored.

  *Mao Zedong coined this phrase in 1957 to describe his radical experiment in industrialization and collectivization in China. It was one of the worst disasters in world history, and by the time Mao called it off in 1962 maybe 30 million people had starved (I return to it in Chapter 10). This makes “Great Leap Forward” rather an odd term to describe the emergence of fully modern humans, but it has caught on.

  *Some Chinese archaeologists think modern humans evolved independently in China. I discuss this idea below.

  *If it sounds odd that African Adam lived a hundred thousand years after African Eve, that is because the names do not mean anything. These were not the first Homo sapiens man and woman; they are just the most recent ancestors to whom everyone alive today can trace genes. On average, men have just as many offspring as women (obviously, since we all have one father and one mother), but the number of children per man varies more around that average than does the number of children per woman, since some men father dozens of babies. The relatively large pool of men with no children means that men’s genetic lines die out more easily than women’s, and the surviving male lines therefore converge on a more recent ancestor than the female ones.

 

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