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The Knowledge: How to Rebuild Civilization in the Aftermath of a Cataclysm

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Knowledge-Rebuild-Civilization-Afte...



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There's also: "The Knowledge: How to Rebuild Civilization in the Aftermath of a Cataclysm"

https://www.amazon.com/Knowledge-Rebuild-Civilization-Afterm...


> mega-tome about the guilded age

What's the title? Sounds interesting.


Now I can't find link. It must be second edition, not published freely.

From web site, just overview of the updates.

But while searching for this. Found another popular book that had theory that it was rats, and the rats had no natural predator's and ate all the palm tree roots.

EXTENSIONS

Since my book’s initial publication in 2005, information has continued to accumulate about collapses, and about avoidances of collapses. I shall mention here three of these recent extensions, to our understanding of Easter Island, the Maya, and Angkor.

First, I summarize below the striking new evidence that Andreas Mieth and Hans-Rudolf Bork have published concerning the widespread Polynesian felling and burning of trees on Easter Island long before European arrival.

Second, measurements of markers that reflect paleoclimate have provided increasing evidence for severe droughts that contributed to the decline of Classic Maya cities in the Southern Maya lowlands.

Finally, the biggest recent advance (summarized in a new chapter included in my book’s 2011 edition) has been in our understanding of the decline of the Khmer Empire based at Angkor


I can't find the link right now, but someone recommended this book in another thread:

http://www.amazon.com/Renovation-4th-Edition-Completely-Revi...


Thanks for that. I won't buy from Amazon anymore because of the way they treated me as a seller (they refunded a customer's money after they claimed they didn't recieve the item, after attempting to return the item), but it's certainly available on Alibris http://www.alibris.com/The-Collapse-of-Complex-Societies-Jos.... A note to anyone else wanting this book: it's expensive. $50 for the paperback, $225 for the 1988 hardcover. It must have been a textbook.


Author's Amazon link leads to UK. Here's a US one:

https://www.amazon.com/Material-World-Substantial-Story-Futu...

The value of ascsubtag and ref preserved to those of the UK one.


That is the book that the repo linked in the OP references.

The book is called "The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity".

I believe the book title is The Gone-Away World. At least that's what I just bought. :)

Thanks for the recommendation.


> This series offers accessible, concise, beautifully produced books on topics of current interest. Leading thinkers write the books in this series, and experts deliver overviews of subjects that range from the cultural and the historical to the scientific and the technical.

...

"Open Access" ($7.47) https://www.amazon.com/Open-Access-Press-Essential-Knowledge...



I am actually reading that book right now. Just started. It is quite informative but the version is from 2004.

I believe https://mankindproject.org/ is work in the spirit of that book.

The book is probably "A Short History of Nearly Everything". I haven't read it in a while so I might be wrong.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Short_History_of_Nearly_Ever...


That link to the book isn’t working for me, any chance you can post the details please?

Link didn't work, would love to get that book.

Sorry, I just saw this. Sadly, I've forgotten the page number. But I'm sure it's recreatable.

Thanks for this. The Library of Babel was one of those ideas that first got me thinking deeply about the nature of knowledge as a kid.


The book's table of contents is viewable at the link, if that helps at all.
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