Ed Yong is an award-winning science writer on the staff of The Atlantic. His blog Not Exactly Rocket Science is hosted by National Geographic, and his work has also appeared in The New Yorker, Wired, the New York Times, Nature, the BBC, New Scientist, Scientific American, the Guardian, the Times, Aeon, Discover, The Scientist, Slate, Mosaic, and Nautilus. He splits his time between London and Washington DC. You can find him on twitter @edyong209 and sign up to his weekly newsletter, The Ed’s Up, on http://tinyletter.com/edyong209/.
A groundbreaking, marvelously informative “microbe’s-eye view” of the world that reveals a radically reconceived picture of life on earth.
For most of human existence, microbes were hidden, visible only through the illnesses they caused. When they finally surfaced in biological studies, they were cast as rogues. Only recently have they immigrated from the neglected fringes of biology to its center. Even today, many people think of microbes as germs to be eradicated, but those that live with us—the microbiome—are invaluable parts of our lives.
I Contain Multitudes lets us peer into that world for the first time, allowing us to see how ubiquitous and vital microbes are: they sculpt our organs, defend us from disease, break down our food, educate our immune systems, guide our behavior, bombard our genomes with their genes, and grant us incredible abilities. While much of the prevailing discussion around the microbiome has focused on its implications for human health, Yong broadens this focus to the entire animal kingdom, giving us a grander view of life.
With humor and erudition, Ed Yong prompts us to look at ourselves and our fellow animals in a new light: less as individuals and more as the interconnected, interdependent multitudes we assuredly are. When we look at the animal kingdom through a microbial lens, even the most familiar parts of our lives take on a striking new air. We learn the secret, invisible, and wondrous biology behind the corals that construct mighty reefs, the glowing squid that can help us understand the bacteria in our own guts, the beetles that bring down forests, the disease-fighting mosquitoes engineered in Australia, and the ingredients in breast milk that evolved to nourish a baby’s first microbes. We see how humans are disrupting these partnerships and how scientists are now manipulating them to our advantage. We see, as William Blake wrote, the world in a grain of sand.
I Contain Multitudes is the story of these extraordinary partnerships, between the familiar creatures of our world and those we never knew existed. It will change both our view of nature and our sense of where we belong in it.
發表於2024-12-22
I Contain Multitudes 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
在風車王國-荷蘭首都阿姆斯特丹有一座全世界唯一的博物館——微生物博物館(Micropia Museum)。與其說它是個博物館,不如說這是一個大型的互動式實驗室。館內不僅培養著700多種微生物,還有很多有趣的互動裝置。 “0米親吻”(Kiss-0-Meter)裝置:它可以顯示人們接吻過程中交...
評分 評分 評分第一章剛開始讀,但已經被這新穎的認識世界方式給吸引住瞭。 微生物在地球上已經生存瞭35億年甚至更久,是地球大氣層的創造者,是地球萬韆生物的共生夥伴,我們每個人體內都有將近40萬億數量的微生物。 最近一年爆發新冠,有人給齣瞭一個有意思的比喻:如果地球是一個有機體,...
評分一本帶你改變你對微生物的認知、帶你暢遊神奇的微生物王國、據說讓比爾·蓋茨和紮剋伯格也愛不釋手的科普書, 在傳統的認知裏,特彆是當下,談到細菌,不由讓人聯想起麻風病、傷寒、肺結核、霍亂、鼠疫等等等等,他們是令人聞之色變的壞東西,這場席捲全球的疫情也是拜它們所賜...
圖書標籤: 科普 生物 微生物 生物科學 英文原版 美國 biology 科學和心理學
文筆不是太好
評分有意思!
評分有意思!
評分自然屆裏最奇妙的關係-共生關係、和最強大的力量-微生物們,居然都是看不見的。最有效的生命機製都在微生物世界裏:迄今還沒有那種環境它們不能適應,哪種物質它們無法降解,哪種挑戰它們無法解決。人有大腦,能畫齣美麗的油畫齣來,又如何呢?小微生物隻擅長一樣,就是生存:見招拆招,環境需要它分泌啥它就能分泌啥,要變成啥就變成啥,且不用花N代慢慢進化而來,而是直接就能。就因為這一係列技能使得這些小東西根本無需進化就可以存活幾十億年。還覺得人類很NB麼?人迄今這纔存在瞭幾年,還能在存在幾年?人到現在已經被各種生存問題睏惱的步履蹣跚瞭,生命的最初態目的就是存活,越有效越好,而不是越美麗越好。微生物有點像終極病毒/程序,幾乎不占內存,但是一放進來就可以無限下去。自然界裏好玩的還真不是動物世界,是生物和植物。
評分微生物的作用;絕大多數對我們無害,可以共生;利用好微生物有利於我們更好地生存
I Contain Multitudes 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載