Science and Inquiry discussion

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The Demon Under the Microscope
Book Club 2020
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March 2020 - Demon Under the Microscope
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https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I can't wait to discuss it with the group. It was so much more than just a history of Sulfa & Domagk. Really incredible.

I never knew how important sulfa drugs were in the history of antibacterials. I has always assumed that penicillin was the first successful antibacterial drug, but it appears that sulfa drugs had a much earlier impact. Also, even though penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming, nothing came of his discovery until Florey and Chain produced it on a mass scale. Florey and Chain deserve much greater credit than Fleming does.
But this book doesn't really go into that story so much. Instead, it focuses on the development of Sulfa drugs and the tragic life of its discoverer. It does a great job describing the race for different producers to come up with variant designs, some of which were even better than Domagk's original design.
There's a real lesson here about how medical innovation operates. Taken together with the Elixir incident covered in the later chapters, it also shows how delicate the balance between too much and too little regulation of drugs. It leaves one to wonder whether a stricter FDA would have prevented the Elixir poisoning, but would also have stopped or slowed down the rapid innovation of the other sulfa compounds, leaving Domagk's inferior molecule as the only established safe option, which didn't work as well for syphilis, for example. And that doesn't even consider the effect of patent law on this question.
It's not a question Hager discusses too much in this book, but reading the story in such detail gives you enough facts to think about the positive and negative impact of patent law and regulation upon the medical industry and drug innovation.

I finished this book last week and really enjoyed it. Like other commenters above I found the complex history of a major medical innovation fascinating. So many different people were involved in a number of different countries. Here is my review.
Jim wrote: "I was shocked by the patent laws. I wonder how much of Domagk's reluctance to try just the sulfa compound was caused by it not being eligible for a patent. Hager discusses it in some length & I lik..."
I found it interesting that, at that time in Germany, they couldn't patent the resulting substance, only the process. I don't think that's the way it currently works in the U.S. What about other countries? Does it even make a difference?
I've always thought it was wrong that someone had the ability to patent a gene because he was the one who discovered it's existence. How can a researcher or company own a gene? Admittedly that's a little different (or a lot different) from patenting a medicine that you created/discovered, but it makes me suspect the whole patent process.
I found it interesting that, at that time in Germany, they couldn't patent the resulting substance, only the process. I don't think that's the way it currently works in the U.S. What about other countries? Does it even make a difference?
I've always thought it was wrong that someone had the ability to patent a gene because he was the one who discovered it's existence. How can a researcher or company own a gene? Admittedly that's a little different (or a lot different) from patenting a medicine that you created/discovered, but it makes me suspect the whole patent process.


I guess & hope the above examples are outliers in an otherwise decently functioning system, but then there is copyright. IIRC, seeds have been copyrighted since the 1920s here in the US. That seems pretty strange to me. I'm not sure where patent & copyright diverge, either. Patent a gene, but copyright a seed? Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like a mess.

This book demonstrates how the patent system did more to harm technological creativity than to help it. After reading this book, you can see how inventors spend more of their time protecting their inventions and stopping others from innovating on top of them: Watt's Perfect Engine by Ben Marsden.
That book is a straight-up biography of James Watt and doesn't really make any moral or practical arguments for or against patents, but this article does a good job elucidating it: https://mises.org/library/james-watt-.... It is an excerpt of Against Intellectual Monopoly.
Books mentioned in this topic
Against Intellectual Monopoly (other topics)Against Intellectual Property (other topics)
Watt's Perfect Engine : Steam and the Age of Invention (other topics)
Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters (other topics)
The Demon Under the Microscope: From Battlefield Hospitals to Nazi Labs, One Doctor's Heroic Search for the World's First Miracle Drug (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
N. Stephan Kinsella (other topics)Ben Marsden (other topics)
Matt Ridley (other topics)
Thomas Hager (other topics)
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