Earth Science News
FLORA AND FAUNA
Tiny organisms, huge implications for people
illustration only
Tiny organisms, huge implications for people
by Peter Dizikes | MIT News
Boston MA (SPX) Jun 16, 2025

Back in 1676, a Dutch cloth merchant with a keen interest in microscopes, Antony van Leeuwenhoek, discovered microbes and began cataloging them. Two hundred years later, a German doctor in current-day Poland, Robert Koch, identified the anthrax bacterium, a crucial step toward modern germ theory. Those two signal advances, with others, have helped create the conditions of modern living as we know it.

After all, germ theory led to modern medical advances that have drastically limited deaths from infectious diseases. In the U.S. in 1900, the leading causes of death were pneumonia, influenza, tuberculosis, and gut infection, which combined for close to half of the country's fatalities. For that matter, due to the threat of disease, childhood was a precarious thing more or less from the start of civilization until the last half-century.

"The world we've experienced since the 1950s, and really since the 1970s, is unprecedented in human history," says MIT Professor Thomas Levenson. "Think of all the grandparents able to dance at their grandkids' weddings who would not have been able to, because either they or the kids would have died from one of these diseases. Human flourishing has come from this extraordinary scientific development."

To Levenson, two things about this historical trajectory stand out. One is that it took 200 years to develop germ theory. Another is our ability to combat these diseases so thoroughly - something he believes we should not take for granted.

Now in a new book, "So Very Small: How Humans Discovered the Microcosmos, Defeated Germs - and May Still Lose the War against Infectious Disease," published by Penguin Random House, Levenson explores both these issues, crafting a historically rich narrative with relevance today. In writing about the development of germ theory, Levenson says, he is aiming to better illuminate "the single most lifesaving tool that human ingenuity has ever come up with."

A 200-year incubation period

The starting point of Levenson's research was the simple fact that van Leeuwenhoek's discovery - accompanied by his illustrations of microbes we can identify today - did not lead to concrete advances for a long, long time.

"It's almost exactly 200 years between the discovery of bacteria and the definitive proof that they matter to us in life-and-death ways," Levenson says. "Infectious disease is a big deal and yet it took two centuries to get there. And I wanted to know why."

Among other things, a variety of ideas, often about the structure of society, blocked the way. The common notion of a "great chain of being" steered people away from the idea that microorganisms could affect human health. Still, some people did recognize the possibility that tiny creatures might be spreading disease. In the late 1600s, the Puritan clergyman Cotton Mather wondered if specific types of "animacules" might each be responsible for spreading different diseases.

Into the 19th century, a few intellectually lonely figures recognized the significance of microbes in the spread of infectious disease, without their ideas gaining much traction. An 18th-century physician in Aberdeen, Scotland, Alexander Gordon, traced the spread of puerperal fever - a disease that killed new mothers - to something doctors and midwives carried on their hands as they delivered babies. A few decades later a doctor in Vienna, Ignaz Semmelweis, deduced that doctors performing autopsies were spreading illness into maternity wards. But skeptics doubted that respectable, gentlemanly doctors could be vectors of disease, and for decades, little was done to prevent the spread of infection.

Eventually, as Levenson chronicles, more scientists, especially Louis Pasteur in France, accumulated enough evidence to establish bacteriology as a field. Medicine advanced through much of the 20th century to the point where, in the postwar years in the U.S., vaccines and antibiotics had enormously reduced human deaths and suffering.

Ultimately, acceptance of new ideas like microbes causing disease involve "how strong cultural presuppositions are and how strong the hierarchical organization of society is," Levenson says. "If you think you've shown that doctors can carry infections from patient to patient, but other people can't entertain that insight because of other assumptions, that tells you why it took so long to arrive at germ theory. The facts of the science may win out in the end, but even if they do, the end can be delayed."

He adds: "It can happen when a solution then gets entangled with things that have nothing to do with science."

Science and society

Understanding that entanglement, between science and society, is a key part of "So Very Small," as it is in Levenson's numerous books and other works. Science almost never stands apart from society. The question is how they interact, in any given circumstance.

"One of the themes of my work is how science really works, as opposed to how we're told it works," Levenson says. "It's not simply an ongoing iterative machine to generate new knowledge and hypotheses. Science is a huge human endeavor. The human beings who do it have their own beliefs and cultural assumptions, and are part of larger societies which they interact with all the time, and which have their own characteristics. Those things matter a lot to what science gets done, and how. And that's still true."

To be sure, infectious diseases have never entirely been a thing of the past. Some are still prevalent in developing countries, while Covid and the HIV/AIDS epidemics are cases where new medical treatments needed to be developed to staunch emerging illnesses. Still, as Levenson observes in the book, the interplay of science and society may produce yet more uncertainties for us in the future. Antibiotics can lose effectiveness over time, for one thing.

"If we want new antibiotics that can defeat bacterial infections, we need to fund research into them and market them and regulate them," Levenson says. "That isn't a political statement. Bacteria do what they do, they evolve when they are challenged." Meanwhile, he notes, while "there has always been [human] resistance to vaccines," the greater prevalence of that today introduces new questions about how widely vaccines will be available and used.

"So Very Small" has earned strongly positive reviews in major publications. The Wall Street Journal stated that "With extraordinary detail and authoritative prose ... What Mr. Levenson's book makes clear is that the battle against germs never ends." The New York Review of Books has called it "an elegant, wide-ranging history of the discovery of microorganisms and their relation to disease."

Ultimately, Levenson says, "Science both gives us the material power that drives changes in society, that drives history, and science is done by people who are embedded in places and times. Looking at that is a wonderful way into bigger questions. That's true of germ theory as well. It tells you a great deal about what societies value, and probes the society we now live in."

Book Report:"So Very Small"

Related Links
MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
FLORA AND FAUNA
Hiker dies in Greece bear encounter
Thessaloniki, Greece (AFP) June 10, 2025
A bear who pushed a hiker to his death in a ravine in northeast Greece may have thought humans were planning an attack, wildlife experts said Tuesday. The body of veteran hiker Christos Stavrianidis was found in the 800-metre (2,600-feet) deep ravine in Fraktou forest, the Ekav national emergency centre told AFP. Stavrianidis was with another experienced hiker, Dimitris Kioroglou, when they were surprised on Monday. "I suddenly saw a bear which attacked me," Kioroglou told news portal NewsIT ... read more

FLORA AND FAUNA
UK nuclear site could leak until 2050s, MPs warn

Govts scramble to evacuate citizens from Israel, Iran

Israel to expel French nationals on Gaza aid boat by end of week

Trump deploys Marines as tensions rise over Los Angeles protests

FLORA AND FAUNA
Trump pocketed over $57 mn from crypto coin sales

Toxic legacies of mining scar South Africa's Soweto and contaminate Thai rivers from Myanmar operations

Decarbonizing steel is as tough as steel

Look Up secures major capital boost to expand radar network and space traffic services

FLORA AND FAUNA
'We have to try everything': Vanuatu envoy taking climate fight to ICJ

'We show up': Pacific leaders apply pressure at oceans summit

Nations advance ocean protection, vow to defend seabed

New Zealand halts aid to Cook Islands over China deals

FLORA AND FAUNA
Permafrost in Swiss Alps at record warmth

Greenland ice melted much faster than average in May heatwave: scientists

Macron, on Greenland visit, berates Trump for threats against the territory

Greenland ice melted much faster than average in May heatwave

FLORA AND FAUNA
Heat tolerant crops achievable but require long timelines and major investment

Brazil says free of bird flu, will resume poultry exports

Climate change could cut crop yields up to a quarter

Turkmenistan names high-yield wheat after its leaders

FLORA AND FAUNA
Dozens of Bali flights cancelled after Indonesia volcano erupts

Hundreds dead and missing as floods devastate Nigeria, India and China

Thousands evacuated as typhoon nears south China: state media

Vietnam death toll from Typhoon Wutip rises to seven

FLORA AND FAUNA
DR Congo, Rwanda to sign peace accord on June 27

Nairobi startup's bid to be 'operating system for global South'

Nine killed in Niger jihadist attack: local sources

E.Guinea leader pardons 37 a year after their arrest

FLORA AND FAUNA
Deforestation in S.Leone national park threatens chimps, humans alike

Light travels through entire human head in breakthrough for optical brain imaging

Human brain reveals hidden action cues AI still fails to grasp

If people stopped having babies, how long would it be before humans were all gone?

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.