Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience
Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience is the compelling story of the history and science behind vitamin C.

Vitamin C begins with scurvy, which afflicted Europe for four hundred years and killed millions. The reasons that a disease whose cure was known from the outset persisted over that time are at once baffling and familiar, and these trials eventually lead to invention of the science of epidemiology. Author Stephen M. Sagar MD then chronicles the discovery of vitamins at the beginning of the twentieth century, a story that encapsulates the rise of a scientific approach to nutrition but with surprising twists and turns. As vitamin science became more acquainted with the mainstream, scientist Linus Pauling reached new heights of fame and influence by popularizing the practice of taking megadoses of vitamin C to prevent colds – a claim that was not necessarily backed by data. This kickstarted the growth of the $40 billion vitamin and supplement industry, which has since prospered all while ignoring science.

This unique and engrossing narrative reveals how medical science functions in the real world and how it has changed over the centuries. Featuring swashbuckling sailors, arctic explorers, penny-pinching bureaucrats, academicians with clashing egos, and intrepid scientists working in malaria-infested jungle laboratories, the story of C is in many ways the story of how science gets done (and undone). From the trial and error of early explorers to the scientific breakthroughs made by biochemists and the birth of the modern supplement industry, this revelatory book tells the story of how cherished beliefs, self-interest, and politics often intertwine with scientific progress.

1140855931
Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience
Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience is the compelling story of the history and science behind vitamin C.

Vitamin C begins with scurvy, which afflicted Europe for four hundred years and killed millions. The reasons that a disease whose cure was known from the outset persisted over that time are at once baffling and familiar, and these trials eventually lead to invention of the science of epidemiology. Author Stephen M. Sagar MD then chronicles the discovery of vitamins at the beginning of the twentieth century, a story that encapsulates the rise of a scientific approach to nutrition but with surprising twists and turns. As vitamin science became more acquainted with the mainstream, scientist Linus Pauling reached new heights of fame and influence by popularizing the practice of taking megadoses of vitamin C to prevent colds – a claim that was not necessarily backed by data. This kickstarted the growth of the $40 billion vitamin and supplement industry, which has since prospered all while ignoring science.

This unique and engrossing narrative reveals how medical science functions in the real world and how it has changed over the centuries. Featuring swashbuckling sailors, arctic explorers, penny-pinching bureaucrats, academicians with clashing egos, and intrepid scientists working in malaria-infested jungle laboratories, the story of C is in many ways the story of how science gets done (and undone). From the trial and error of early explorers to the scientific breakthroughs made by biochemists and the birth of the modern supplement industry, this revelatory book tells the story of how cherished beliefs, self-interest, and politics often intertwine with scientific progress.

24.95 In Stock
Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience

Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience

by Stephen M. Sagar M.D.
Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience

Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience

by Stephen M. Sagar M.D.

Hardcover

$24.95 
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Overview

Vitamin C: A 500-Year Scientific Biography from Scurvy to Pseudoscience is the compelling story of the history and science behind vitamin C.

Vitamin C begins with scurvy, which afflicted Europe for four hundred years and killed millions. The reasons that a disease whose cure was known from the outset persisted over that time are at once baffling and familiar, and these trials eventually lead to invention of the science of epidemiology. Author Stephen M. Sagar MD then chronicles the discovery of vitamins at the beginning of the twentieth century, a story that encapsulates the rise of a scientific approach to nutrition but with surprising twists and turns. As vitamin science became more acquainted with the mainstream, scientist Linus Pauling reached new heights of fame and influence by popularizing the practice of taking megadoses of vitamin C to prevent colds – a claim that was not necessarily backed by data. This kickstarted the growth of the $40 billion vitamin and supplement industry, which has since prospered all while ignoring science.

This unique and engrossing narrative reveals how medical science functions in the real world and how it has changed over the centuries. Featuring swashbuckling sailors, arctic explorers, penny-pinching bureaucrats, academicians with clashing egos, and intrepid scientists working in malaria-infested jungle laboratories, the story of C is in many ways the story of how science gets done (and undone). From the trial and error of early explorers to the scientific breakthroughs made by biochemists and the birth of the modern supplement industry, this revelatory book tells the story of how cherished beliefs, self-interest, and politics often intertwine with scientific progress.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781633888265
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 08/15/2022
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Stephen M. Sagar, MD, brings 40 years' experience in science and medicine to tell a story that integrates the history of science into broader cultural, political and intellectual life.

Sagar has a B.A. in American civilization and a M.Sc. in medical science from Brown University and an M.D. from Harvard Medical School. He held faculty positions at Harvard Medical School, the University of California San Francisco, and Case Western Reserve University. He has published over 100 original articles, reviews, and book chapters, including publications in Science, the New England Journal of Medicine and Harrison's Textbook of Internal Medicine. He served as associate editor of the Annals of Neurology. He lives in San Francisco, California.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Introduction xi

Part I Buccaneers and Bureaucrats: The History of Scurvy

1 A Disease of Mariners 3

2 Catastrophe and Enlightenment 21

3 An Unlikely Hero and a Partial Victory 37

4 Steps Forward and Back 53

Part II The Chemists Take Over: The Discovery of Vitamins

5 A Different Kind of Nutrient 71

6 The Vitamin Hunters 93

7 Scurvy for Science 107

8 Normal Science 117

Part III The New Buccaneers: The Business of Vitamins

9 The Passion of Linus Pauling 131

10 Vitamins, Business, and Politics 149

11 Lessons Learned 161

12 A Guide for the Perplexed 167

Appendix: Selected Food Sources of Vitamin C 181

Notes 183

Bibliography 201

Acknowledgments 215

Index 217

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