As previously mentioned in the previous chapter regarding the life of Moses, sometime around 1446BC, he goes to discuss with the Pharaoh the release of the Israelites from slavery. The Pharaoh refuses to release the Israelites, consquently, God releases ten plagues onto Egypt to force the Pharaoh to let the Israelites leave Egypt. The ten plagues consisted of water into blood, frogs, lice, swarm of flies, diseased livestock, men and animals will break out with boils, thunderstorm of hail and fire, locusts, three days of darkness and death of all first-born son and daughters. The Pharaoh finally consents to the Israelites leaving Egypt allowing Moses to organize the Israelites and begin their 40 year journey back to Canaan, but the Pharaoh commands a group of his soldiers to chase after and kill all of the Israelites. Moses sees the approaching Egyptian army and with Gods assistance parts the Red Sea, leads the Israelites through the divided water, then after the Israelites are safe from
Guns, Germs, and Steel is a book by Jared Diamond that talked about geographical differences between different societies. In his book he mentioned his trip to New Guinea in which he thought about the cultural differences between New Guinea and more advanced societies such as the U.S and Europe. He came to the conclusion that the more advanced societies influence over other cultures due to the geographic differences and environmental diversity in their homelands. The first part of the book “From Eden To Cajamarca” Jared Diamond discussed human evolution, the clash of the Maoris and the Morioris in the Catham Islands, and Francisco Pizarro conquering of the Inca Empire.
In the book Why Geography Matters: Three Challenges Facing America; By Harm de Blij I learned many things and my perspective about the world and what's going on it has changed after reading this book. After reading this I wished that I had payed more attention to what was going on in the world and now, I will work hard to keep being aware of the world so I am no longer ignorant of it. Harm De Blij points out many things and makes clearer for me. In Why Geography Matters, Harm de Blij exhibits how geography's viewpoints yield one of a kind bits of knowledge into the inter connections that stamp out onto our ever changing world. The book talks about three major problems.
The concept of civilizations has intrigued humans for centuries and continues to fascinate us today. Felipe Fernandez Armesto's book provides a comprehensive overview of how
The case of the collision of Cajamarca brings forth to light the differences between Old World and New World societies. Our human ancestors from the beginning survive as hunters-gatherers but that change 10,000 years ago as the Holocene period sought to shift into food production. It was a new lifestyle, one that began with the rise of the Natufian culture. In lecture 10, it stated that, “Natufians were foragers who lived by hunting and gathering, but they had settled down and lived in particular locations” (Love, 10). The Natufian culture has been linked to have trade networks, however, cultivation evidence was found in Levant.
It went from looking at the physical aspects of the world such as the environment, landscapes, topography and climate to also including the human, cultural, and political aspects of an environment. It changed the understanding of how humans inhabit and shape the spaces around them. Not just how our lives are shaped by the environments we live in but the whole story of how they affect us and in turn how we affect them. This opened geography to become a much broader field of study allowing for race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, nationality, and intersectionality to become focal points in research (Jacobs and Spillman, 2005). ___ the growing awareness of how much our culture shapes geographic phenomena (Blunt, 2007).
Growing up, I have always had an interest in geography and thinking about different countries and what makes them the way that they are. I have not been in a geography class since middle school and Human Geography was a class that made me think about things I have never thought of before. The readings of both Kropotkin and Mackinder brought up very interesting points, some that conflict and others that agree. Each author writes in a way that stimulates and makes you think about geography and certain topics in different ways which I find to be very rare in writings from this time period. Discussing Kropotkin’s and Mackinder’s general ideas, points they disagree or agree on, and my own views on the topic will all be discussed in this final paper.
In Ancient Greece, they had some dilemmas with the mountains, land, and seas. In Aksum, they profited from the sea, location, land, and resources. Geography proves itself over and over again that it is the mother of history throughout different time periods. Geography still and will continue impacting our lives because where a person lives can determine their future. Recently, people who live in California have been in danger because of all the wildfires.
Human geography has a wide variety of different factors, one of those many is political geography. Political geography is mainly focused and influenced by political affairs and human territoriality. With this there are different factors that were created within political geography such as, nation, nation-state, multinational state and united-nations. There are factors of our globe which are shaped by imperialism and colonialism. All these make up our world all in different places.
There are three themes that I saw in this book that I want to talk about in this paper. The first of these them is relationship between Native American and European which can be seen between characters of the book and the natives that they encounter through their adventure. The second theme that I want to talk about is how the environment in shaping
Chapter 1 Outline: 1. Geography a. Human geography i. Study of human activities and where and why they are located where they are. b. Physical geography i. Study of natural forces and where and why they occur c. Place and Region. i.
In many ways, Blij emphasizes the fact that geography is constantly and drastically changing. Therefore; we must
The differences in customs, religion, and basic moral and human ideology prevented the Native American and European cultures from sharing the common bond of human fellowship to serve as the basis and foundation for the growth and betterment of human civilization. Unfortunately, this is a trait seen by the human species that have led to the collective downfall of civilizations throughout time, and will repeat itself until the human perspective of its remarkably fortunate place in the universe is dramatically
Geography not only plays a part in the spread of a religion but also can be inspiration or reflection for the religion itself. Many societies have numerous deities inspired by the landscape in and around their civilization. However, I believe not all religions drew inspiration from the land they lived in. Mesopotamian societies had multiple gods. Most deities represented cosmic forces of nature such as the sun, moon, water, and storms who were responsible for the creation of the earth (World Societies p. 36).
INTRODUCTION Since the end of the cold war in 1989, the United States of America has emerged to be the sole surviving superpower, introducing international politics to its current and prevailing state of unipolarity. But, what really is unipolarity? The years following the end of the Second World War after 1945, were a period of bipolarity that was met with the cold war: a struggle in both military and political efforts between the western bloc (the United States and its allies) and the eastern bloc (the Soviet Union and its allies in the Warsaw pact). The cold war came to an end as the soviet bloc collapsed leaving Russia to stand on its own and with less power, thus giving the United States of America its supremacy as the only superpower