How Chemists Fought Famine and Disease, Killed Millions, and Changed Our Relationship with the Earth

Autor: Frank A. von Hippel

Tema: SCI000000 Science / General

Editorial: University of Chicago Press (2020-09-01)

urn:isbn:10.7208/chi

How Chemists Fought Famine and Disease, Killed Millions, and Changed Our Relationship with the Earth ebook cover
For thousands of years, we've found ways to scorch, scour, and sterilize our surroundings to make them safer. Sometimes these methods are wonderfully effective. Often, however, they come with catastrophic consequences—consequences that aren't typically understood for generations.

The Chemical Age tells the captivating story of the scientists who waged war on famine and disease with chemistry. With depth and verve, Frank A. von Hippel explores humanity's uneasy coexistence with pests, and how their existence, and the battles to exterminate them, have shaped our modern world. Beginning with the potato blight tragedy of the 1840s, which led scientists on an urgent mission to prevent famine using pesticides, von Hippel traces the history of pesticide use to the 1960s, when Rachel Carson's Silent Spring revealed that those same chemicals were insidiously damaging our health and driving species toward extinction. Telling the story of these pesticides in...