Big History: From the Big Bang to the Present

by Cynthia Stokes Brown

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Extend the human story backward for the five thousand years of recorded history and it covers no more than a millionth of a lifetime of the Earth. Yet how do we humans take stock of the history of our planet, and our own place within it? A ?vast historical mosaic" (Publishers Weekly) rendered engaging and accessible, Big History interweaves different disciplines of knowledge to offer an all-encompassing account of history on Earth. Since its publication, Cynthia Brown's ?world history on a show more grand scale" (Kirkus) has been translated into nine languages and has helped pr show less

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6 reviews
This is a fine introduction to the subject of big history, a sort of broad view of the universe, Earth, and humanity. There should have been some better fact-checking - the claim on page 7 that the cosmic microwave background is "3 degrees Celsius, just as predicted by the Big Bang," is embarrassing (It's just under 3 degrees KELVIN, the equivalent of 270 degrees BELOW ZERO Celsius). Such an egregious error so early on makes it difficult to take anything in the book at face value.
½
Great overview of the world so far, from The Big Bang to current events. Skip the final chapter, in which she speculates on what could happen in the future, unless you want to end the book on a depressingly bleak note.
Vast subject, covering the formation of the earth and solar system, gradual development of life and animal species, and finally the evolution of man. The book attempts to cover the history of mankind, but can only highlight major developments and peoples in this limited space. Nonetheless, the coverage is good, although in audio format, I did not think the narrator, Teri Clark Linden, was as polished as many other professionals. I'd also say that if you're running out of time or patience by the time you hit the last chapter, you can omit it without missing anything.
Stokes Brown beweert dat dit het eerste echte uitgebreide overzichtswerk over Big History, maar tegelijk erkent ze openlijk dat ze erg schatplichtig is aan David Christian en zijn ‘Maps of Time’, dat 3 jaar eerder verscheen. Met uitzondering van de eerste hoofdstukken over het ontstaan van de kosmos en het leven op aarde, volgt Stokes Brown echter vooral de chronologie en periodisering van vader en zoon McNeill (‘The Human Web’, 2003) en wordt haar relaas eerder een klassieke wereldgeschiedenis. Positief is de aandacht die ze geeft aan ecologische aspecten, en ook het didactische luik op het einde van elk hoofdstuk met een opsomming van onbeantwoorde vragen is aanvankelijk erg inspirerend. Maar ronduit ergerlijk is dat Stokes show more Brown regelmatig erg verouderde visies weergeeft (over de Kelten bijvoorbeeld), aandacht besteedt aan omstreden theorieën zoals het Black Athena van Bernal, de Nazca-lijnen in Peru van Von Däniken en de boeken van Gavin Menzies. Ze is ook geregeld erg onzorgvuldig in haar formuleringen, in de eerste hoofdstukken bijvoorbeeld toont haar woordgebruik aan dat ze niet echt de evolutietheorie van Darwin heeft begrepen. En naarmate we dichter komen bij de huidige tijd wordt het erger: het hoofdstuk over de periode 1500-1800 “Eén wereld” noemen is toch wel echt te kort door de bocht; of de instorting van de Sovjetunie, in 1991 wijten aan de “partijleiders die snakten naar de materiële voordelen van het kapitalisme”, dat is toch van een banaliteit die sprakeloos maakt. Kortom, dit is duidelijk een gefaalde poging tot Big History! show less
½
Esta obra es una auténtica epopeya de nuestro tiempo, desde el comienzo del universo, cuando éste no es más que un único punto del tamaño de un átomo, hasta el siglo XXI en un planeta superpoblado. Así, nos habla del Big Bang, de la formación de nuestro Sistema Solar, de la aparición de la vida en la Tierra, de la evolución humana, tanto fisiológica como culturalmente, los primeros agricultores, la esclavitud, los intercambios comerciales, las disparidades mundiales, el analfabetismo, etc. La autora consigue crear una asombrosa síntesis de la historia y del conocimiento científico de la humanidad y la tierra que habitamos.

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Author Information

13 Works 317 Members
Cynthia Stokes Brown is a retired professor of education at Dominican University of California. She has written works of history and biography, including the American Book Award-winning Ready from Within: Septima Clark and the Civil Rights Movement, Connecting with the Past, and Refusing Racism. She lives in Berkeley, California.

Common Knowledge

Epigraph
Recognizing that the international community is on the horns of a dilemma [the environmental impact of spectacular economic growth since 1945], world historians must look beyond development for an organizing principle. The ne... (show all)w narrative of world history must have ecological process as its major theme. It must keep human events within the context of where tehy really happen, and that is the ecosystem of the earth. The story of world history, if it is to be balanced and accurate, will inevitably consider the natural environment and the myriad ways in which it has both affected and been affected by human activities. 
-- J. Donald Hughes, ed. The Face of the Earth: Environment and World History
First words
We are all whirling about in space on a small planet, bathed for part of each day in the light and warmth of a nearby star we call the sun.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Can they share with less industrialized people?

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, History, Science & Nature, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
909History & geographyHistoryWorld history
LCC
D20 .B77History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaHistory (General)General
BISAC

Statistics

Members
250
Popularity
129,135
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.56)
Languages
Dutch, English, Portuguese, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
10
ASINs
2