Few days ago I came across a paper published in the last issue of EHR (LIII, 2000) "A critical survey of recent research in Chinese economic history" by Kent G. Deng. Paper evaluates one of the most heated questions of world history: why premodern China did not industrialize despite enjoying, at least until 1500, Euroasian superiority in metallurgy, military power, navigational equipment, manufacture of silk and of porcelain, paper making, block printing, mechanical clocks, number and organization of professional merchants, long-distance communication systems (roads and canals) throughout the country, "a remarkable degree of social mobility", standardized weights and measures, a non-agricultural population of about 20% of China's total, a multi-layerd network of 45, 000 market towns supported by a large number of "free, small-scale farmers, working under a system of private land-ownership" - all this together with a single national government ("active in maintaining food supply, famine relief, and price control), a standardized written language, a dominant Confucian code of ethics". Although Deng questions the Hegelian/Marxist unilinear conception which underlies "the use of the European experience as a gauge to measure China", he recognizes that this has been a major preoccupation of historians, particularly of western scholars, among whom he detects nine schools of thought: those who emphasise, respectively, ideological factors, the way the market functioned, environmental/geographical differences, the balance of class forces, population, technology, rent-seeking government, role of the state, and the world-system. Having separated western scholarship into these nine schools, Deng has an easy time pointing to the (obvious) weaknesses of each. Landes's Wealth and Poverty, for example, is brushed aside in just one short sentence: "When this bulky, narrative book is stripped to the kernel, the subject is 'culture' and cultural determinisn." More ink is spent on other works, but the discursive strategy which Deng employs is still extremely misleading, for it creates the illusion that every work on this question is pushing a particular brand of determinisn, when the truth is that most scholars today accept an overdetermined explanation, meaning not the mutual causation of everything by everything (only Resnick and Wolf would make this erroneous inference) but the overdetermination of one - or of a tight constellation of primary factors - by many secondary/conjuctural/accidental factors. I agree that in the case of somelike like Jared Diamond we are dealing - explicitly though not implicitly - with a strong environmental determinism, but even in his case one does not refute him by showing (obviously) that the environment is not everything, or by pointing - as Deng does, to a quick similarity between Europe's and China's geography. We have enough of that in Blaut (or in the Monthly Review). Here's Deng: "what is often overlooked is that there is an 'Asian Mediterranean' in the China seas. In the past, different peoples met, migrated, and traded there. Moonsoon winds favored shipping in the Asian Mediterranean and there is no reason to view Asia as geographically inferior to the Mediterranean on the other side of Euroasia. Therefore, geographic difference no longer provides a safe haven for enviromental determinisn in studying China." Deng cites a paper by Diamond in *Nature*, not the book, but it is important to understand that in the book Diamond says that "geographic connectedness and only modest internal barriers gave China an initial advantage." But he then adds that "China's connectedness eventually became a disadvantage, because a decision by one despot could and repeatedly did halt innovation. In contrast, E's geographic balkanization resulted in dozens or hundreds of independent, competing stateless and centers of innovation. If one state did not pursue some particular innovation, another did, forcing neighboring states to do likewise or else be conquered or left economically behind." This is a view long argued by neo-Weberians, but in their writings the *political/military* dimension of this apparent geographic determinism becomes transparent: in Europe we had an international political organization known as the *interstate* system. Every effort at creating a world empire had failed. Deng could have recognized this political aspect right here in his analysis of "geography, but he prefers to divide and rule, so he approaches this political issue separetely, and responds, this time against Mokyr, that "China always faced competition from the Steppes and increasingly so after AD 1000: from the Tartars, Mongols, and Manchus, to name just a few." But this point still misses the net: European inter-state competition was between relatively equal state powers, and it was more intense and sustained than elsewhere. Also, we need to understand the role of *culture* in this context as well (which is implicit in Diamond's use of the word "innovation"). As Chirot writes: "There existed a European-wide culture in which learned men, traders, pilgrims, mercenaries, sailors, and statesmen moved with ease across political boundaries...Intolerant dogmatism pushed good minds, capital, and skilled men to other states and prevented stagnation. Thus it was that German printing techniques, Italian banking methods, Dutch cartography, Portuguese maritime experience, and the explosion of learning, art, and science spread throughout Europe to help those who knew how to use them". I would insist that the Mediterranean is unique geographically in the way that it connects to the rest of the world, and in the way that it acted as the busiest cultural/ethnic intersection in world history. Leave that and the other schools which Deng criticises for later.