4 Quotes & Sayings By Carl Zimmer

Carl Zimmer is a science writer, author, and an award-winning journalist. His work has appeared in the New York Times and in many other publications and magazines and it has been heard on National Public Radio. He is the author of several books including: The Tangled Tree: A Radical New History of Life, The Robotic Car: A Window Into the Future of Our Automobile, and Parasite Rex: Inside the Bizarre World of Nature's Most Dangerous Creatures. Carl lives in Boston with his wife and two children.

1
In 1494, King Charles VIII of France invaded Italy. Within months, his army collapsed and fled. It was routed not by the Italian army but by a microbe. A mysterious new disease spread through sex killed many of Charles’s soldiers and left survivors weak and disfigured. French soldiers spread the disease across much of Europe, and then it moved into Africa and Asia. Many called it the French disease. The French called it the Italian disease. Arabs called it the Christian disease. Today, it is called syphilis. Carl Zimmer
2
From Lankaster to Lorenz, scientists have gotten it wrong. Parasites are complex, highly adapted creatures that are at the heart of the story of life. If there hadn't been such high walls dividing scientists who study life - the zoologists, the immunologists, the mathematical biologists, the ecologists - parasites might have been recognized sooner as not disgusting, or at least not merely disgusting. If parasites were so feeble, so lazy, how was it that they could manage to live inside every free-living species and infect billions of people? How could they change with time so that medicines that could once treat them became useless? How could parasites defy vaccines, which could corral brutal killers like smallpox and polio?. Carl Zimmer
3
Evolution has taught them that pointless harm will ultimately harm themselves. Carl Zimmer