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Immunity Summary

Immunity: The Evolution of an Idea by Alfred I. Tauber (Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Zoltan Kohn Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Zoltan Kohn Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Boston University)

Modern immunology traditionally conceives of the immune system as providing defense against pathogens. Alfred I. Tauber criticizes this conception of immunity as too narrow, because it discounts much of the immune system's other normal functions. These include active tolerance of nutritional exchanges with the environment and the stabilization of cooperative relationships with resident micro-organisms. An expanded account extends immunity's functional role from singular 'defense' to broadened discernment of environmental 'exchange.' This ecological perspective has profound theoretical implications, for the basic notion of immune identity is reconfigured: highlighting the organism as a holobiont (a consortium of diverse organisms living in cooperative relationships) challenges prevailing concepts of individuality and the self/nonself dichotomy heretofore organizing immune theory. Indeed, if theoretical interest is focused on the challenges of maintaining immune balance in the full ecological context of the organism, then immune regulation assumes new complexity. Tauber maintains that the key to unravelling that puzzle requires a critical re-assessment of the cognitive processes that underlie immune effector functions. Accordingly, he provides the outline of a re-formulated 'cognitive paradigm' that dispenses with agent-based models and adopts an ecologically conceived understanding of perception and information processing. The implications of this revised configuration of immunity and its deconstructed notions of individuality and selfhood have wide significance for philosophers and life scientists working in immunology, ecology, and the cognitive sciences.

Immunity Reviews

no one can deny the unique pleasure to be gained in revisiting an old haunt or re-reading a favourite book. The latter is the type of pleasure in store for those readers of Immunity: the Evolution of an Idea who are familiar with author Alfred Tauber's formidable corpus of work on the philosophy and history of immunology. ... All in all ... Tauber's capstone is an admirable synthesis of his years of thinking about and engaging with the philosophy of one of the core tenets of immunology. * Neeraja Sankaran, History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences *
Alfred Tauber updates discussions on some of the central questions of immunology in a most embracing manner, discussing general concepts and theories in their historical context, considering their origin and evolution, while bringing forth novel ideas and unexplored relationships between notions that, in one way or another, have been around, often thanks to Tauber's writings. This is an excellent piece of scholarship, which, while theoretical, is attentive to empirical data and views, and makes a very significant contribution to the field. * Antonio Coutinho *
Fred Tauber has provided a stimulating new interpretation of the development of immunology that shows how the discipline has begun to be embraced by biology's recent ecological turn. The result is a contextual view of immune cognition mediated by a dialectical interaction between organism and environment. This book will be of compelling interest to a wide audience including theoretical biologists and philosophers of science. * Sahotra Sarkar, Professor of Philosophy and Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin *
Tauber, in his past books, taught us about the people, the ideas and the experimental pursuits that created the field of immunology. Today's applications of immunity to cancer, vaccination and cell therapies beget a new immunology. Tauber, in this book, ushers us into a new way of thinking. * Irun R. Cohen, MD, Professor of Immunology, Emeritus, The Weizmann Institute of Science *
Tauber acknowledges and dissects the philosophical basis hidden in immunology, dealing with its ontological and epistemological overtones, originally highlighted by Metchnikoff and used by Burnet...It is required reading for practicing immunologists, historians, philosophers and sociologists of science. Adding to its richness, the book includes an abundant and properly chosen bibliography. Tauber is the most valid commentator in immunology today. * Nelson Vaz, Professor of Immunology, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil *
Drawing on extensive knowledge of historical, philosophical and scientific literature, [the book] abolishes the simplistic, militaristic vision of the immune system and establishes a new paradigm for how we think about our interactions with the microbial world. This fascinating book will certainly become an important reference point for generations of researchers and theoreticians interested in immunology fundamentals. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *

About Alfred I. Tauber (Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Zoltan Kohn Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Zoltan Kohn Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Boston University)

Alfred I. Tauber is Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus and Zoltan Kohn Professor of Medicine, Emeritus at Boston University, where he served as Director of the Center for Philosophy and History of Science from 1993 to 2010. Author of The Immune Self (Cambridge 1994) and co-author of Metchnikoff and the Origins of Immunology (Oxford 1991) and the Generation of Diversity (Harvard 1997), he has also published extensively in ethics and science studies.

Table of Contents

Preface Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: A History of the Immune Self Chapter 2: Whither Immune Identity? Chapter 3: Individuality Revised Chapter 4: Immune Cognition Chapter 5: Eco-immunology Chapter 6: A New Biology? Epilogue Endnotes References

Additional information

NLS9780190914196
9780190914196
019091419X
Immunity: The Evolution of an Idea by Alfred I. Tauber (Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Zoltan Kohn Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Zoltan Kohn Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Boston University)
New
Paperback
Oxford University Press Inc
2018-08-16
328
N/A
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