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368 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2013
"The Measured Man" by Mark Bowden is about a man with Crohn's disease who is also a scientist who makes computer models of his body in order to understand himself and his disease better. He does this for a large portion of his day, taking his own stool samples, monitoring how many steps he walks and his heart intake, and he calculates every aspect of his food intake--the amount of protein, carbohydrates, sugar, sodium, etc. And he hopes the future will allow people to monitor themselves in the same he monitors himself.There are other pieces I know I'm leaving out, but those are three that were good that I can recall.
Nathaniel Rich's "Can a Jellyfish Unlock the Secret of Immortality?" is about a very small jellyfish, a protozoan, which is no binger than a pinky fingernail, that can live forever. And there's a Japanese scientist named Shin Kubota who wants to find a way to harness the study these jellyfish to better understand how to aid in human health. This essay, though, becomes more a piece about Kubota than anything else, but nevertheless fascinating.
Gareth Cook's "Autism Inc." is about how some of the people who are on the autism spectrum are being hired by a company in Sweden to put their skills to use to work as contractors for other big companies who need their natural abilities and concentration to do important work. For instance, one company needed a computer programmer to program lines and lines of boring code, and they couldn't have anyone taking shortcuts in programming because they didn't want to have their products crash. The essay notes that only about 20 percent of the people on the autism spectrum would actually be eligible to hold down a job because some of their lack of social or emotional control would not allow them to do this, or they are not highly gifted in the way that companies would need their work. Again, a fascinating story.