Mirage of Health: Utopias, Progress, and Biological Change

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Pickle Partners Publishing, Dec 2, 2018 - Health & Fitness - 188 pages
Every man dreams of a utopia in which disease is conquered and the only thing left to die of is old age. In a study of the history and concepts of medicine, René Dubos, who is one of America’s most distinguished scientists, shows that such a utopia is neither possible nor desirable. Organized species such as ants have established a satisfactory equilibrium with their environment and suffer no great waves of disease or changes in their social structure. But man is essentially dynamic, his way of life constantly in flux from century to century. He experiments with synthetic products and changes his diet; he builds cities that breed rats and infection; he builds automobiles and factories which pollute the air; and he constructs radioactive bombs. As life becomes more comfortable and technology more complicated, new factors introduce new dangers; the ingredients for utopia are the agents of new disease. Dr. Dubois’ thesis may sound discouraging to a world looking for a cure-all in medical research, but actually it is affirmative—even hopeful. Once we accept the fact that “complete freedom from disease and from struggle is almost incompatible with the process of living,” we will know that our aspirations cannot be satisfied with health and the easy life.

“The viewpoint expressed in Mirage of Health has now become a dominant one in our general culture and encompasses much of current concern with improving lifestyles related to health and promoting greater health consciousness among the public. In this sense, the discussion, although written twenty-five years ago, is perhaps more relevant today than it was then.”—DAVID MECHANIC, University Professor, René Dubos Professor of Behavioral Sciences, and Director of the Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research, Rutgers University
 

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Contents

Contents
CIVILIZATION 106
BIOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL ADAPTATION 18
STRUGGLE AND PARTNERSHIP IN THE LIVING
ENVIRONMENT AND DISEASE 48
Environment 55
Environment 60
HYGEIA AND ASCLEPIUS 64
SOCIAL PATTERNS OF HEALTH AND OF DISEASE 83
EFFECTS OF DISEASE ON POPULATIONS AND
UTOPIAS AND HUMAN GOALS 124

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About the author (2018)

René Dubos (1901-1982) was a French-born American microbiologist, experimental pathologist, environmentalist, humanist, and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction for his book So Human an Animal: How We Are Shaped by Surroundings and Events (1968). Born in Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt, France in 1901, Dubois studied at the Collège Chaptal and the Institut National Agronomique in Paris, Rutgers University, the University of Rochester, and Harvard, among others. He came to the United States in 1924 and became a naturalized citizen in 1938. He was a member of the staff of the International Institute of Medical Research in Rome in 1927-28 and was associated with the Rockefeller Institute of Medical Research from 1927. He was George Fabyan professor of comparative pathology and professor of tropical medicine at the Harvard Medical School from 1942-44. Dubos devoted most of his professional life to the empirical study of microbial diseases and the analysis of the environmental and social factors that affect the welfare of humans. His pioneering research in isolating antibacterial substances from certain soil microorganisms led to the discovery of major antibiotics, for which he was honored with the Lasker Award in Public Health in 1948. He performed groundbreaking research and wrote extensively on a number of subjects, including tuberculosis, pneumonia, and the mechanisms of acquired immunity, natural susceptibility, and resistance to infection. In later years, Dubos explored the interplay of environmental forces and the physical, mental and spiritual development of mankind. He was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies of Wesleyan University from 1963-65, and served as chairman of the trustees of the René Dubos Center for Human Environment, a non-profit education and research organization that was dedicated in his honor in 1980. He remained actively involved in the Centre until his death in 1982, aged 81.

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