14
Feb 14

Chapters 5-8

It seems as though Johnson enjoys repeatedly playing on the irony of the situation that in an attempt to fix the problem, Edwin Chadwick had unknowingly made the problem much worse.

“This is the great irony of Chadwick’s life: in the process of inventing the whole idea of a social safety net, he unwittingly sent thousands of Londoners to an early grave.”

It also goes hand in hand with the amount of influence the miasma theory actually had. Looking back and thinking what was going on in their minds though, it is hard to blame the city’s leaders. As Morris Hedaya mentioned in his post, there are many diseases that are in fact airborne. What the people devoted to the miasma theory did not realize was the evolutionary purpose of being able to smell bad odors, which is to prevent people from ingesting the source of these bad odors. Little did they know, most of the time, smelling rotting flesh did not actually cause disease. Chadwick had thought getting rid of the smell would prevent disease, but he forgot that flushing the cesspools into the river would cause so many to actually ingest the disease causing agent.


14
Feb 14

Ghost Map Ch5-8

How many times has the thoughts of the government and the fear ridden people lead to wrong decisions? How many times did the stigma of being poor carry over into a deserved death by plague? Apparently, a lot.
As I was reading the end chapters I was confused as to how many people assumed the poor were poor from choice, were living in filth by choice. Whitehead was a physician and religious man that we even willing to believe that the poor and destitute could have been the deserved receivers of this disease yet his cases said otherwise when the rich and “pristine” died. The environment was conducive to these deaths with their cramped quarters and limited sewage systems but the people were not to blame. In fact, now we recognize that “squatter communities… are where the developing world goes to get out of poverty” (Johnson).
I also found it amazing this spread of disease was exactly what helped contribute to modern cities. People had slowly developed to accomodate these larger populations and led to some of the advances we know today. The chapter focusing on risks in living cities did instill a sense of fear in me though, that we are so helpless if it comes to things such as nuclear warfare. Yet it also comforted me to know that biological warfare could be halted in a matter of days, that we had gotten so advanced from the times of London’s cholera outbreak. Admittedly, there are still diseases we must work to find cures for such as cholera and HIV but the advances made in modern medicine and city society is amazing.


14
Feb 14

Ghost Map, Chapters 5-8

Like many of my classmates have mentioned, I found the last chapters of The Ghost Map to be just as interesting as the first, and I was excited to draw connections between some of the ideas Johnson brought up and some of the conversations we have had in class. What first came to mind was the idea of social prejudice, an incredibly large stumbling block in the way of real scientific answers in both the case of the London cholera epidemic and the HIV/AIDS one today. It is truly frightening to note that even in this era, with all of our technological advances and scientific research, prejudice can still cloud and warp our rationality.

But another part of the reading I found interesting and relatable in terms of our class was Johnson’s statement on page 125: “So often what is lacking in many of these explanations and prescriptions is some measure of humility, some sense that the theory being put forward is still unproven. It’s not just that the authorities of the day were wrong about miasma; it’s the tenacious, unquestioning way they went about being wrong.” I was so intrigued by this idea because I remember specifically complaining about the article we were given to read in class about a possible correlation between cholera and the environment-but my complaint was about that the writer lacked the ‘tenacious’ way of the London cholera writers. I had found the article in class to be too apprehensive when I read it. Because its authors were was too afraid to make any concrete claim, I thought, the article’s finding’s were unconvincing and even inconsequential. But after reading this passage in Johnson’s book, I began to reconsider, to appreciate the open mindedness and even humility of that article. Isn’s that method so much better, so much more conducive to the ever-changing world of scientific discovery? Our human desire for concrete answers and tangible results may cloud our judgements, so it is important to remember the dangerous tenacity and narrow-mindedness of the people Johnson mentions and always keep an open mind.