Historian Geertje Dekkers' biography, "Myriad, Microscopic and Marvellous," published by Reaktion in 2025, details the life and discoveries of microbiologist Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, who in 1674 observed single-celled life forms, bacteria and protozoa, racing in water from a lake under a microscope. Van Leeuwenhoek also accurately described red blood cells, capillaries, striated muscle fibres, spermatozoa, and the eye's crystalline lens, according to Dekkers. Upon his death in 1723, the UK Royal Society mourned the loss of its most valuable correspondent.
Anthropologists Melissa Leach and James Fairhead explore the interconnectedness of humans and other living entities in their book "Naturekind," published by Princeton University Press in 2025. The authors examine human interactions with chickens, horses, bees, bats, and plants, delving into the study of meaning in sign systems, known as semiotics. Leach and Fairhead consider forests, seas, soils, and cities, which contain both living and non-living entities, developing biosemiotics by linking biological findings to social and cultural interpretations.
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