
This compact volume invites listeners to consider disease not merely as a medical problem but as a disturbance of the delicate balance between living organisms and their surroundings. Written over a century ago, the author frames disease in the language of cells, adaptation, and the ever‑shifting definition of what counts as “normal” for each individual. By treating the body as a collection of surfaces, fluids, and nerves, the work sets a stage for understanding how changes disrupt harmony. The tone is thoughtful rather than didactic, aiming at readers with a basic grasp of anatomy and physiology.
The main body examines infectious illnesses, using them as clear examples of how external agents upset the body’s equilibrium, while also offering a concise survey of organic conditions, especially heart disease. Brief discussions of heredity, insanity, and the influence of environment and social factors round out the picture. Though not a textbook for physicians, the narrative is engaging enough to spark curiosity about the underlying mechanisms that keep us healthy.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (326K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-03-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1933
A pioneering American pathologist and medical educator, he helped shape modern laboratory medicine in the United States and left his name attached to the “Councilman body” seen in yellow fever and viral hepatitis. His career linked Johns Hopkins and Harvard at a time when scientific medicine was rapidly changing.
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by Thomas Hunt Morgan