Tags
Language
Tags
March 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
25 26 27 28 29 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31 1 2 3 4 5 6

Mysteries of the Microscopic World

Posted By: FenixN
Mysteries of the Microscopic World

Mysteries of the Microscopic World
24xDVDRip | MP4/AVC, ~448 kb/s | 640x480 | Duration: 11:49:35 | English: AAC, 92 kb/s (2 ch) | + PDF Guide | 3.24 GB
Genre: Biology

An invisible world of astonishing complexity is all around you. A world so small you can't see it with the naked eye. A world so crowded that its population staggers the mind. A world in which you participate every day—often without even knowing it. The inhabitants of this world are trillions of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other organisms, collectively known as microbes. Hundreds of thousands could fit on the period at the end of this sentence. And many play a powerful role in your life, from the bacteria in your stomach that help you digest food to the pathogens that make you sick.
Mysteries of the Microscopic World is your illustrated guided tour through a realm that is as teeming with exotic life as any rainforest—and that is just as exciting. Presented by award-winning Professor Bruce E. Fleury of Tulane University, these 24 half-hour lectures tell the story of

how microbes evolved;
how they function;
how humans discovered them;
how they harm and also help us; and
how we compete, coexist, and coevolve.

A Spellbinding Narrative

Assuming no background in science, Mysteries of the Microscopic World teaches you all the biology you need to understand cells as the basic unit of life, DNA as the amazingly versatile genetic code, the immune system as an almost miraculous arsenal of defenses, and other features of the tiny domain where microbes thrive. Among the intriguing concepts you encounter are these:

Coevolution: Civilization and microbes have grown up together—in beneficial associations such as bread- and winemaking, and less fortunate relationships such as the pandemics that have periodically changed the course of history.
Extremophiles: On Earth, microbes flourish in environments of punishing heat, cold, acidity, and saltiness, where nothing else can survive. These "extremophiles" may be clues to what life is like on other planets.
Cyanobacteria: Earth owes its oxygen-rich atmosphere to the evolution of photosynthetic cyanobacteria. These tiny organisms were so successful that they dominated the planet for nearly two billion years.
Darwinian medicine: Outsmarting disease-causing organisms means understanding how they evolved to make us sick and how they adapted to defeat our treatments. In medicine, it pays to think like Darwin.
Cytokine storm: When people in the prime of life are felled by an epidemic, it could be because the pathogen induces a "cytokine storm," an immune system overreaction—as happened to millions of young people in the deadly 1918 flu.

Professor Fleury weaves these and many other stories into a spellbinding narrative that takes you from the germ theory of disease to germ warfare, from the challenges of being small to the advantages of infecting through a "vector" intermediary, from ancient prokaryotes to the latest probiotics. After watching these lectures, you will be able to follow with deeper understanding news reports about epidemics, vaccine research, antibiotic-resistant germs, bioterrorism, and many other topics about the microbial world.

Evolutionary Arms Race

In our ceaseless contact with microbes, the good news is that some age-old diseases are being defeated. Smallpox, a scourge as ancient as human history, was eradicated in the late 1970s, and similar campaigns are underway against polio, leprosy, and guinea-worm.

But the bad news is that many microbes mutate astonishingly quickly, making them highly adaptable in the evolutionary arms race with each other and with us. The following battles, covered in detail in this course, are still inconclusive:

HIV/AIDS: Only 50 years have passed since HIV first appeared in humans, which is not long enough for the body to evolve an effective defense—or for HIV to coevolve to a less virulent strain. The most worrisome scenario is for the virus to mutate into an airborne form.
Multiple drug resistance: In 1952, penicillin could cure virtually any infection caused by Staphylococcus. No more. Today, the bane of hospitals is the multidrug-resistant Staph strain MRSA. Even more troubling is a resistant strain of Streptococcus dubbed flesh-eating bacteria.
Killer flu: The deadliest epidemic of all time was the 1918 flu, killing an estimated 50 to 100 million people. Starting as a normal flu, it mutated into an unusually virulent form. Scientists have recovered samples of the virus from victims of the era so they can sound the alarm when a similar flu type appears.

A Scientific Detective Story

Just as interesting as the microbes are the scientists who discovered and charted this microscopic realm. It's easy to forget that the cause of plagues and even the existence of microorganisms were a complete mystery for thousands of years, until the work of science detectives such as Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch, who laid the foundations for bacteriology; or Alexander Fleming, who discovered penicillin; or the unheralded Ernest Duchesne, who recognized the antibiotic properties of penicillin more than 30 years before Fleming, but whose work went unnoticed. Among the other pioneers of the microscopic world that you learn about are these:

Ignaz Semmelweis: Working in Vienna in the 1840s, Semmelweis linked his hospital's high mortality rate among women in childbirth with their treatment by staff members who did frequent autopsies. The solution, washing hands with disinfectant, was rejected by his offended colleagues.
Alexandre Yersin: When the bubonic plague struck China in the 1890s, this Swiss bacteriologist rushed to the scene. Together with a Japanese researcher, Dr. Kitasato, he discovered the plague bacillus, identifying the pathogen that had menaced the world for centuries.
Stanley Miller: Microbial and other life had to start with complex biomolecules. In the 1950s, graduate student Stanley Miller, working under Nobel laureate Harold Urey, performed a brilliant experiment showing that the chemical precursors of life formed naturally in conditions thought to exist on the early Earth.

World of Wonder

The winner of two Mortar Board Awards for outstanding teaching from Tulane University, Professor Fleury has a gift for making science accessible to non-scientists. In Mysteries of the Microscopic World, he tackles the ideal subject, one that is unusually rich in historical and cultural connections, human stories, intriguing technical details, and relevance to the daily lives of everyone. "This is one of the most fascinating areas in biology," he notes, "not just because of the value we get from knowing how and why we get sick, but because of the sheer beauty of what's going on at the microscopic level."

After viewing this course, he says, "you'll never feel quite the same way about the world again, because wherever you go, whatever you do, you'll be more aware of all the creatures that are living around you, hidden by their small size."

Lectures:

1 The Invisible Realm
2 Stone Knives to Iron Plows
3 The Angel of Death
4 Germ Theory
5 The Evolutionary Arms Race
6 Microbial Strategies
7 Virulence
8 Death by Chocolate
9 Bambi's Revenge
10 The Germ of Laziness
11 The 1918 Flu—A Conspiracy of Silence
12 The 1918 Flu—The Philadelphia Story
13 The 1918 Flu—The Search for the Virus
14 Immunity—Self versus Non-Self
15 Adaptive Immunity to the Rescue
16 AIDS—The Quiet Killer
17 The Deadly Strategy of AIDS
18 Autoimmunity—Self versus Self
19 Allergies and Asthma
20 Microbes as Weapons
21 Pandora’s Box
22 Old World to New
23 Close Encounters of the Microbial Kind
24 Microbes as Friends

Look also:

After the New Testament: The Writings of the Apostolic Father

Age of Henry VIII

Early Christianity the Experience of the Divine

European Thought and Culture in the 20th Century

Fall of the Pagans and the Origins of Medieval Christianity

Famous Greeks

History of Christianity in the Reformation Era

History of England from the Tudors to the Stuarts

History of the Bible

How to Become a SuperStar Student, 2nd Edition

Introduction to Judaism

Life Lessons from the Great Myths

Roots of Human Behavior

Classic Novels: Meeting the Challenge of Great Literature

Luther: Gospel, Law, and Reformation

Natural Law and Human Nature

Understanding the Brain

screenplay
Mysteries of the Microscopic World

Mysteries of the Microscopic World

Mysteries of the Microscopic World

Mysteries of the Microscopic World

Welcome to the best eLearning video (English, German, French, Spanish language) and many more: LINK
Do not forget to check my blog! Updated regularly!

No mirrors pls!