Description
Why the West Rules — For Now by Ian Morris is an ambitious and sweeping work of global history that tackles one of the biggest questions of the modern era: why did Western civilisations come to dominate the world, and will that dominance last? Praised by Niall Ferguson as the nearest thing to a unified field theory of history we are ever likely to get, this book spans 15,000 years of human history to find the answer.
Morris, a Stanford historian and archaeologist, rejects simple explanations based on racial superiority, cultural exceptionalism, or geographic luck alone. Instead, he develops a groundbreaking Social Development Index that measures the power, urbanisation, information processing, and war-making capacity of Eastern and Western civilisations across millennia. Through this data-driven lens, he reveals that the lead has shifted back and forth between East and West multiple times throughout history, that geography — not genetics or culture — has been the primary driver of which civilisation leads at any given time, that the West’s current dominance is relatively recent and not inevitable, and that the patterns of history suggest a dramatic shift in global power may be approaching in the coming decades.
Morris writes with remarkable clarity, weaving together archaeology, biology, sociology, and political theory into a narrative that is both intellectually rigorous and thoroughly engaging. He brings ancient empires, industrial revolutions, and modern geopolitics into a single coherent story about the forces that shape civilisations.
This is a fascinating read for intellectually curious readers across Kenya and East Africa — particularly those interested in world history, geopolitics, economics, the rise of China, Africa’s place in the global order, and the future trajectory of power. In a time when the global balance is visibly shifting, this book provides the historical context to understand what’s happening and what may come next.
A perfect companion to Guns, Germs, and Steel, Sapiens, and Basic Economics.
Get your PDF copy instantly from Cliffmatt Books at just Ksh 100 — delivered via WhatsApp or email after M-Pesa payment.









Reviews
There are no reviews yet.