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The article summarizes Yuval Noah Harari's "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind," highlighting his central argument that humanity's success stems from its unique ability to imagine and collectively believe in fictional constructs. It explores four pivotal "revolutions": the Cognitive Revolution, which enabled complex language and large-scale cooperation beyond Dunbar's Number through shared fictions like gossip; the Agricultural Revolution, presented as a societal advancement that paradoxically led to individual decline but increased population and allowed for the imagination of political orders; the Unification of Humankind through the pervasive influence of money, empires, and religions as shared beliefs; and finally, the Scientific Revolution, characterized by the admission of ignorance, empirical observation, and the application of theories for new capabilities, yet also contributing to inequality and new forms of imagined progress. Ultimately, the text argues that while humanity achieves collective greatness through these imaginative leaps and revolutions, individual suffering often intensifies, posing a crucial question for the future: how humanity will navigate its ability to technologically reshape itself.