The Power of Plagues. Irwin W. Sherman

The Power of Plagues - Irwin W. Sherman


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with elaborate religious practices emerge, and writing is invented. Through agriculture and its prospect for increased food production, there was a population expansion that favored technological advances, as well as the development of cities (urbanization) and the rise of civilizations.

      Another consequence of humans settling down was an increase in the amount of human disease. Agriculture by itself did not create new infections; it simply accentuated those that were already present or it converted an occasional event into a major health hazard. This was largely due to the fact that transmission of infectious agents becomes easier as individuals are crowded together; the practice of using human excrement (“night soil”) or animal feces (manure) as fertilizer allows for the transmission of infective stages; and finally, the closer association with domestic animals allows for their diseases to be transmitted to humans.

      The Lethal Gifts of Agriculture

      The disruptive effects of an epidemic disease are more than simply the loss of individual lives. Often the survivors are demoralized, they lose faith in inherited customs, and if it affects the working age group, it can lead to a material as well as a spiritual decline. As a consequence, the cohesion of the community may collapse and it may become susceptible to invasion from neighbors. Once disease is widespread in an agricultural community, it can produce a listless and debilitated peasantry, handicapped for sustained work in the fields, for digging irrigation canals, and for resisting military attack or throwing off alien political domination. All this may allow for economic exploitation.

      The smaller population size of hunters and gatherers makes it seem probable that person- to-person “civilized” infectious diseases, such as measles, influenza, smallpox, and polio, could not have established themselves, because these are density-dependent diseases requiring a critical number of individuals for transmission. Although there is no hard literary or archeological evidence, it does seem reasonable to suggest, as did William McNeill, that “the major civilized regions of the Old World each developed its own peculiar mix of infectious, person-to-person diseases between the time when cities first arose (about 3000 BC) and about 500 BC. Such diseases and disease-resistant populations were biologically dangerous to neighbors unaccustomed to so formidable an array of infections. This fact made territorial expansion of civilized populations much easier than would otherwise have been the case.”

      The Accident That Caused Societal Differences

      Fast forward to the future. In Guns, Germs, and Steel, Diamond argues persuasively that it was not biological differences but geography that was the decisive element. It was differences not in the braininess or genetics of the human populations but in the plant and animal resources available on a particular continent—an accident of geography—that made the difference. Diamond believes that the fortuitous accident began in the Fertile Crescent, which contained a suitable array of plants and animals, called “founders,” and that these formed the basis for domestication. What were the founder plants? Those locally available in Southwest Asia/Fertile Crescent that would not serve as the


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