Switzerland coverSwitzerland, 
by Sir Frank Fox.
 

Originally published by Adam and Charles Black in 1914. Published by Project Gutenberg for Kindle and in other file types. Free.

Reviewed by Veronique Greenwood

If you limit yourself to reading just
the ebooks available for free on the internet, as I have been doing
lately, you wind up inhabiting the world prior to 1923. American
copyright laws are complicated
, but books published before that
magical year, 90 years prior to this one, are in the public domain. It's about as close to time travel as you can reasonably get.

To really immerse yourself in the era, you
can read the travelogues of Sir Frank Fox, a kind of early-twentieth
century Bill Bryson. An Australian journalist who spent much of his
life reporting for newspapers in London, he wrote books about the
natural history, geography, and ethnography of various lands, and
there are five of them—on Australia, Bulgaria, England, the Balkan
Peninsula, and Switzerland—available at Project Gutenberg for free.
For this review, I read Switzerland,
published in 1914.

As a rule, one of the risks of
inhabiting this pre-1923 world is drowning in a sea of unnecessary
words. Today the fashion is to write with extreme clarity,
projecting each scene into the reader's mind as if he or she were
watching a movie, and to snip out all excess verbiage. Not a hundred
years ago—reading Fox is a bit like codebreaking, with sentences
that sometimes encompass eleven or twelve clauses and words that
aren't used much anymore, like “waggish” and “beneficient.”
His very first chapter includes a hilariously lengthy Socratic
dialogue rebutting the idea that mountain people are more virtuous
and vigorous than lowlanders, owing to some magical quality of the
mountain air—not the introduction that a modern writer would use,
but curiously charming nevertheless, once you adjust your ear to his
style.

It's worth noting, too, that this
pre-1923 world as represented by its literature is a pretty
Anglocentric one. Fox's readers were British subjects, or former
British subjects, so perhaps it's no surprise that he is eager to
caricature “the Swiss race” and make his own sweeping
generalizations about why they are the way they are, while
simultaneously tearing down other sentimental depictions. And the
chapter on Swiss prehistory is threaded with regular assertions that
human society is on an ever-upward trend, with pathetic (yet noble)
nomads at the bottom and the 1914 European at the crest.

But it's an interesting experience,
revisiting the literary fashions and the inherited wisdom of a time
not so long ago. To the modern reader interested in geography and
ethnography, and not afraid to put on a monocle and go along for the
ride, Switzerland is
fun reading. The prehistory chapter includes a great summary of what
was known about the villages-on-stilts that fringed many Swiss lakes
in Celtic times. The chapter on local writers includes an anecdote
about the time Byron, visiting the fashionable salons along Lake
Geneva, attempted to scandalize polite society as he had in Britain,
and failed. Apparently the Swiss found him tedious. And the chapter
on the Alps, along with a compact treatise on the formation and decay
of mountains, includes this note:

“M.
Charles Rabot [a geographer and mountaineer] asserts that the
glaciers in Argentina are also retreating, and surmises, from data
perhaps not so well established, that there has been a general
retreat of glaciers during the last half of the nineteenth century
throughout Spitzenbergen, Iceland, Cetnral Asia, and Alaska. He
suggests that the cause is a present tendency towards equalisation
of the earth's temperature. Others more boldly affirm that the Swiss
glaciers, as well as other great ice masses existing on the globe,
are remnants of the last Ice Age, and are all doomed to disappear as
the cycle works round for the full heat of the next Warm Age. But the
disappearance, if it is to come, will not come quickly, and the doom
of ice-climbing in Switzerland is too remote a threat to disturb the
Alpinist.”

That passage falls with quite a
different meaning on our ears today, and one of the great pleasures
of reading Fox is looking for these harmonies and dissonances, the
moments that reveal how much has stayed the same and how much has
changed. If that sounds like fun to you, then there's a cache of free
ebooks waiting for you on Fox's Gutenberg author page.

Happy time-traveling.

 

 


HeadshotVeronique
Greenwood is a former staff writer at DISCOVER Magazine. She writes
about everything from caffeine
chemistry
to cold
cures
to Jelly
Belly flavors
, and her work has appeared in
Scientific American,
TIME.com, TheAtlantic.com, and others. Follow her on Twitter
here.

 


Ghostcell"The Ghost in the Cell," by Scott C. Johnson. Published by Matter. Available via WebePub, Kindle. $.99.

Reviewed by Annalee Newitz

It's a prize that scientists have sought since the early nineteenth century: a biological marker that predicts violent behavior in humans. In the 1830s, phrenologists believed head bumps could reveal a criminal personality — often, prostitutes and the poor were said to have bumps that marked them as deviants from birth. But today, it seems this pursuit may have moved beyond the realm of pseudoscience.

Thanks to recent discoveries, we have evidence that the genes of abused children are marked by the experience. Over time, these effects leave them prone to depression and make it harder for them to control their violent impulses. Could we be on the cusp of discovering a scientific approach to a social problem? In an essay for Matter magazine, former war correspondent Scott C. Johnson suggests that we are. Unfortunately, Johnson fails spectacularly to explain the complexity of this problem, and winds up telling a story that distorts both the science and the reality of abuse in many people's lives.

Continue reading “The Wrong Way to Write about Epigenetics and Violence”


WhenIm164coverWhen I'm 164, by David Ewing Duncan, Published by TED Books (Available for Kindle, iPad, Nook)

Reviewed by Annalee Newitz

Half cultural prognostication and half science journalism, David Ewing Duncan's TED Books longread When I'm 64 explores whether medicine will one day make it possible for us to live forever — and what would happen to human society if we did. It's a hotly debated topic, and Duncan takes his time tackling every aspect of it in this lengthy essay. Engaging and often fun, the book takes us from the labs where scientists are exploring the genes that control aging, to brain-computer interface demonstrations where paralyzed people are learning to control artificial limbs with their minds. Whether we do it with biology or machines, it's likely that humans will artificially enhance our longevity at some point. Though the prospect of doubling our life expectancy seems crazy to some, Duncan argues it's not entirely implausible. Especially given how far we've come over the past century. 

Still, ethical questions plague the project. While researching his book, Duncan ran a survey online and in his lectures where he asked people if they would like to live beyond the standard 80 years. Most said no, though a significant minority said they wouldn't mind living to be 120 or 164. Those yearning to be immortal represented less than one percent of respondents. Many people felt that living longer than 80 years would mean depleting the Earth's resources even more quickly than we already are. Others worried that young people would have no chance at getting good jobs, since their elders could keep working for decades longer. Some simply felt that living for a long time would be depressing and boring.

Several sections of the book are devoted to Duncan's quest to understand how it would change humanity if we could live much longer than we do now. From the rational world of tissue engineering labs where researchers hope to use 3D printers to make healthy, new organs, he ventures into Singularity University where would-be immortals from Silicon Valley listen eagerly to longevity advocate Aubrey De Gray's prediction that the first person who will live to be 1,000 has already been born. These true believers imagine that science will solve our energy problems and economic difficulties long before overpopulation due to immortality becomes a planet-destroying problem.

As if acknowledging the mostly unscientific nature of the longevity project, Duncan explores its implications by discussing mythology and science fiction about immortality. We may not know what role telomeres play in aging, but we certainly know that The Matrix and Terminator warn against using technology to enhance humans. Given the speculative nature of his topic, Duncan's forays into fiction make a lot of sense, and help provide a cultural frame for debates over longevity enhancement.

Here on Download the Universe, we often discuss how a particular e-book makes use of the medium, whether with enhanced images, video, or even just a good set of links out to more sources. But with When I'm 164, I'd like to talk about a stylistic quirk of e-books that has nothing to do with format: the fact that it's become standard practice for online writing to include a lot of first-person, confessional storytelling. 

Should online writing always be personal? Certainly it's refreshing that online writers try to avoid some of the print media's fake objectivity. But should that always mean authors need to personalize their subjects?

Like a lot of longreads online, Duncan's book veers into the personal. He delves into his sadness at his parents' impending deaths, interviews both them and one of his sons about their views on life extension, and ultimately concludes the book by declaring that he's emotionally torn by the idea of living forever. In some ways, the climax of the book is Duncan's final declaration of ambivalence about scientifically enhanced longevity. I think this personal touch works in some ways — it helps to draw the reader in, and acknowledges the highly personal responses that many people have to this area of research.  

But it often reads as cheesy and unnecessary, as if Duncan were just going through the motions of making his online writing more personal than print.  Of course it's easy to sympathize with his sadness at a parent's decline, but there is nothing particularly insightful or unusual to Duncan's first-person stories about these issues. He paints the scientists and thinkers he's consulted for this book in far more interesting detail than he paints himself. The first person bits just weren't necessary to make this story compelling.

Duncan is at his best when coaxing out intriguing speculations from scientists, engineers and philosophers about their views on life extension. Duncan's observations of their work form the meat of this extremely gripping tale about one possible future — of enhanced longevity — that could arise from contemporary medical science.


Newitz12web2Annalee Newitz is the editor-in-chief of io9.com, and the author of
Scatter, Adapt and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction (coming in May 2013 from Doubleday).

Do No HarmDo No Harm, by Anil Ananthaswamy. Published by Matter, $.99. Visit Matter for details about formats, purchasing, and membership.

Reviewed by Carl Zimmer

Talk about burying the lead.

Yesterday the Washington Post announced that they were hiring a new editor-in-chief. Reporting for the New York Times, Christine Haughney wrote that the Post made the switch because they were struggling with a steep decline in readership. It's not until deep in the piece that Haughney makes a startling statement:

"The paper also faces fresh competition from online news outlets, like Politico, whose founders include former Washington Post reporters."


Politico
certainly didn't bring the Washington Post to its current moment of crisis singlehandedly. But it is striking to me that a web operation started from scratch in 2007 could baloon so fast that it could become a major threat to what was once one of the world's leading newspapers.

My attention was drawn to this buried lead because I've recently been getting to know a new player in the science news business, called Matter. This morning they are launching their web site, and their first piece of long-form journalism. It's way too early to predict whether Matter will become the Politico of the science world. But they definitely are entering the arena with impressive style.

Continue reading “Matter: A Look At A New Way To Read About Science”


Hookeflea copyMicrographia: Or Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made With Magnifying Glasses With Observations and Inquiries Thereupon
. By Robert Hooke. Originally published 1665. Project Gutenberg (web), Linda Hall Libary (web), Google Books (free), National Library of Medicine (flash web site, Turn the Pages App [free])

Reviewed by Carl Zimmer

In January 1665, Samuel Pepys wrote in his diary that he stayed up till two in the morning reading a best-selling page-turner, a work that he called “the most ingenious book I read in my life.” It was not a rousing history of English battles or a proto-bodice ripper. It was filled with images: of fleas, of bark, of the edges of razors.

The book was called Micrographia. It provided the reading public with its first look at the world beyond the naked eye. Its author, Robert Hooke, belonged to a brilliant circle of natural philosophers who–among many other things–were the first in England to make serious use of microscopes as scientific instruments. They were great believers in looking at the natural world for themselves rather than relying on what ancient Greek scholars had claimed. Looking under a microscope at the thousands of facets on an insect’s compound eye, they saw things at the nanoscale that Aristotle could not have dreamed of. A razor’s edge became a mountain range. In the chambers of a piece of bark, Hooke saw the first evidence of cells.

Continue reading “The Most Ingenious Book: How to Rediscover Micrographia”