On the Shelf
Quick Takes on The Father of Surgery, Box Boats, Cloning and the Law, etc.
Wendy Moore Broadway ~ 2005 ~ 352 pp. $26 (cloth) $14.95 (paper) |
Although radical in his experimentation, Hunter was moderate in his approach to treatment. One of the most capable surgeons of his time, he favored invasive surgery only with great restraint, often preferring to do nothing and let nature take its course. He infuriated many of his contemporaries with his outspoken opposition to unnecessary pills and potions, and his naturalist studies anticipated some of The Origin of Species by almost seventy years. Amid the controversy, he rose to become London’s leading surgeon, treating such patients as William Pitt and Adam Smith, but more often the nameless poor. Moore gives us a captivating account of a man whose techniques were uncompromising, unconventional, often shocking, and perhaps even morally questionable—the man “to whom anyone who has ever had surgery probably owes his or her life.”
Kerry Lynn Macintosh Cambridge ~ 2005 ~ 286 pp. $28 (cloth) |
American courts, unfortunately, are filled with judges who learned from the likes of Macintosh and who will seek to make their name by inventing new rights that undermine democratic self-governance. But even they are unlikely to find any helpful guidance in this sloppy book.
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Brian J. Cudahy Fordham ~ 2006 ~ 352 pp. $29.95 (cloth) |
In part, we can thank Malcom P. McLean for the problem. McLean, who died in 2001, is considered the father of “containerization.” A half-century ago, McLean sold his successful trucking business to purchase Pan-Atlantic Steamship Co., a cargo carrier, to experiment with transporting containers. It was his aim to make cargo transportation intermodal, seamlessly integrating the different modes of transportation (truck, rail, and ship) by means of a standardized container. Today, the process of detaching containers from trailer trucks (or trains) at the port of departure, hoisting them onto ships, and reattaching them to different trucks at the destination seems mundane, but the significance of this innovation for both global commerce and international security is difficult to overstate.
Economist Marc Levinson’s The Box tells how McLean inaugurated the era of containerization on April 26, 1956 by transporting 58 containers from Newark to Houston aboard a ship called the Ideal X. McLean’s fundamental insight, Levinson writes, “was that the shipping industry’s business was moving cargo, not sailing ships.” To reduce the cost of shipping, new modes and orders would have to replace every part of the existing system: “ports, ships, cranes, storage facilities, trucks, trains, and the operations of the shippers themselves.”
McLean’s aim was to save money, and save money he did: what would normally cost $5.83 per ton, McLean accomplished for 15.8 cents per ton. McLean’s obsession with cutting costs lives on not just in the global shipping industry but also in contemporary logistics management. When McLean introduced the container to the military—a move that made it possible to improve the delivery of supplies to American troops in Vietnam—logistics was primarily a military discipline. “By 1985,” Levinson writes, it “had become a routine business function” for manufacturers and retailers whose logistical precision reduces inventory levels and cuts warehouse costs. With the help of modern communication and computer technology, containerization has made possible the extremely efficient supply chains of corporations such as Wal-Mart and Dell.
In Box Boats, Brian Cudahy, a transportation historian, concentrates on the history of the ships that carry the world’s intermodal containers—so many containers that they “would more than encircle the earth at the equator.” Cudahy points out that the great aim of containerization, “the ability to dispatch a sealed container from origin to destination with no intermediate handling of the cargo it contains,” can become “a terrible liability if a sealed container is used to deliver a lethal cargo.” He reports that “new systems of surveillance are being developed and deployed at world seaports”; for instance, American-built technology is used to scan every container that enters the port of Hong Kong. But the fact remains, Cudahy writes, that the very efficiencies “that were responsible for the growth of containerization over the past fifty years can quickly become liabilities” that terrorists will try to exploit.
Levinson points out that when inspections were stepped up after the 9/11 attacks, “auto plants in Michigan began shutting down within three days for lack of imported parts.” This, then, is the great challenge for American policymakers concerned with port security: creating an inspection and certification system capable of finding containers with dangerous or illicit cargo, without disrupting the fragile supply network of ultra-efficient modern industry.
Ronald W. Dworkin Carroll & Graf ~ 2006 ~ 336 pp. $24.95 (cloth) |
Concerns that Artificial Happiness is an indictment of all psychopharmacological therapy are misplaced, as Dworkin supports the use of drugs to treat serious mental illness. However, confusion on this point is the inevitable result of his failure to explain more clearly the difference between “minor depression” and “everyday unhappiness,” and to offer precise criteria for when medication might really be appropriate. In addition, he offers little discussion of the differences between medications in their purposes and effects; they are instead lumped together with alcohol as “stupefying” influences on the natural mind. The questions underlying his argument are sound: What does it mean to have one’s “natural” identity mediated by another substance? What are the implications for one’s ability and incentive to achieve “real” happiness? What is the significance of the escalating numbers of Americans—both adults and children—taking psychotropic medication? Dworkin’s modern history of the medical profession is extensive, and the data thought-provoking. But the interpretation lacks precision and depth, and the important subjects he addresses are more richly explored in the 2003 President’s Council on Bioethics report, Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and the Pursuit of Happiness.
The Editors of The New Atlantis, "On the Shelf," The New Atlantis, Number 13, Summer 2006, pp. 99-102









