So very small How humans discovered the microcosmos, defeated germs -- and may still lose the war against infectious disease
Book - 2025
"Two out of three soldiers who perished in the Civil War died of infected wounds, typhoid, and other infectious diseases. But no doctor truly understood what was happening to their patients. Twenty years later, the outcome might have been different following one of the most radical intellectual transformations in the history of the world: germ theory, the recognition that the tiniest forms of life have been humankind's greatest killers. It was a discovery centuries in the making that transformed modern life and public health. This revolution has a pre-history. In the late-sixteenth century, scientists and hobbyists used the first microscopes to confirm the existence of living things invisible to the human eye. So why did it take t...wo centuries to make the connection between microbes and disease? As Thomas Levenson reveals in this globe-trotting history, the answer has everything to do with how we see ourselves. For centuries, people in the west, believing themselves to hold God-given dominion over nature, thought too much of humanity and too little of microbes to believe they could take us down. When scientists finally made the connection by the end of the 19th-century, life-saving methods to control infections and contain outbreaks soon followed. The next big break came with the birth of the antibiotic era in the 1930s. And yet, less than a century later, the promise of the antibiotic revolution is already receding from years of overuse. Why? In So Very Small, Thomas Levenson follows the thread of human ingenuity and hubris across centuries--along the way peering into microscopes, spelunking down sewers, traipsing across the battlefield, and more--to show how we came to understand the microbial environment and how little we understand ourselves. He traces how and why ideas are pursued, accepted, or ignored--and hence how human habits of mind can, so often, make it terribly hard to ask the right questions"--
Location | Call Number | Status | |
---|---|---|---|
2nd Floor New Shelf | 616.9/Levenson | (NEW SHELF) | Due Aug 3, 2025 |
- Subjects
- Published
-
New York, NY :
Random House
2025.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Edition
- First edition
- Physical Description
- xviii, 422 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN
- 9780593242735
- Introduction
- Part 1. Learning to See
- I. "God preserve us all"
- II. "Melancholy, sad and frightfull dreames"
- III. "The satisfaction of finding out new things"
- IV. "The most marvelous of all"
- V. Great Chains and Mental Fetters
- VI. "Animalculated Business"
- Part 2. Germ Theory Without Germs
- VII. "Not as a misfortune, but a crime"
- VIII. "An unquestionable reality"
- IX. "Die like rotten sheep"
- X. "Propagated by human intercourse"
- XI. "The most terrible outbreak of cholera"
- XII. "I stand at the Altar of the murdered men"
- XIII. "The silver cord was loosed"
- XIV. "Never too strong"
- Part 3. Germ Theory
- XV. "Life is a germ and a germ is Life."
- XVI. "The importance of the fact can hardly be exaggerated"
- XVII. "Little threadlike forms"
- XVIII. "We touch on the principle of vaccination."
- XIX. "Results of supreme practical importance"
- XX. "an epoch-creating announcement of colossal consequences."
- XXI. "It can now be taken as conclusive" p236
- XXII. "I felt as if I were walking across a battlefield."
- Part 4. Winning the Battle, Losing the War
- XXIII. "Private 606"
- XXIV. "Harmless, free of undesirable side effects, easily tolerated, and effective"
- XXV. "The end of the beginning"
- XXVI. "The final result of this practice"
- XXVII. "So Very Small"
- Acknowledgments
- Bibliography
- Notes
- Index
- Image Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review