The Wild Life of Our Bodies: Predators, Parasites, and Partners That Shape Who We Are Today

Priekinis viršelis
Harper Collins, 2011-06-21 - 309 psl.

A biologist shows the influence of wild species on our well-being and the world and how nature still clings to us—and always will.

We evolved in a wilderness of parasites, mutualists, and pathogens, but we no longer see ourselves as being part of nature and the broader community of life. In the name of progress and clean living, we scrub much of nature off our bodies and try to remove whole kinds of life—parasites, bacteria, mutualists, and predators—to allow ourselves to live free of wild danger. Nature, in this new world, is the landscape outside, a kind of living painting that is pleasant to contemplate but nice to have escaped.

The truth, though, according to biologist Rob Dunn, is that while "clean living" has benefited us in some ways, it has also made us sicker in others. We are trapped in bodies that evolved to deal with the dependable presence of hundreds of other species. As Dunn reveals, our modern disconnect from the web of life has resulted in unprecedented effects that immunologists, evolutionary biologists, psychologists, and other scientists are only beginning to understand. Diabetes, autism, allergies, many anxiety disorders, autoimmune diseases, and even tooth, jaw, and vision problems are increasingly plaguing bodies that have been removed from the ecological context in which they existed for millennia.

In this eye-opening, thoroughly researched, and well-reasoned book, Dunn considers the crossroads at which we find ourselves. Through the stories of visionaries, Dunn argues that we can create a richer nature, one in which we choose to surround ourselves with species that benefit us, not just those that, despite us, survive.

 

Turinys

The Origins of Humans and the Control of Nature
3
Why We Sometimes Need Worms and Whether or Not You Should
15
The Pronghorn Principle and What Our Guts Flee
30
The Dirty Realities of What to Do When You Are Sick and Missing
45
Several Things the Gut Knows and the Brain Ignores
61
How We Tried to Tame Cows and Crops but Instead
109
So Who Cares If Your Ancestors Sucked Milk
130
How Predators Left Us Scared Pathosridden and Covered
141
From Flight to Fight
155
Choosing Who Lives
181
How Lice and Ticks and Their Pathogens Made Us Naked
203
How the Pathogens That Made Us Naked Also Made
217
The Reluctant Revolutionary of Hope
233
Acknowledgments
261
Index
279
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Apie autorių (2011)

Rob Dunn is an associate professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at North Carolina State University and the author of several books, including Every Living Thing. A rising star in popular-science journalism, he writes for National Geographic, Natural History, Scientific American, BBC Wildlife, and Seed magazine. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina, with many thousands of wild species, including at least one species of mite living on his head.

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