Author John Green on How Tuberculosis Shaped Our Modern World
Science Quickly
Scientific American
4.4 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 7 March 2025
⏱️ 10 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Here's the truth about AI. |
| 0:02.0 | AI is only as powerful as the platform it's built into. |
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| 0:21.9 | use right now. That's why the world works with ServiceNow. Visit ServiceNow.com |
| 0:27.8 | slash UK slash AI for people. For Scientific American Science quickly, I'm Rachel Feltman. If you're |
| 0:36.4 | familiar with John Green, you might |
| 0:38.0 | associate him with best-selling young adult novels like The Fault in Our Stars or with the |
| 0:42.7 | healthy on days of early YouTube vlogging. But a few years ago, John became obsessed with a topic |
| 0:48.5 | that you might find surprising, tuberculosis. His new book, Everything is Tuberculosis, comes out on March 18th. |
| 0:58.5 | He's here today to tell us how tuberculosis has shaped our world and why, even though it's now |
| 1:03.6 | curable, it remains our planet's deadliest infectious disease. John, thanks so much for joining |
| 1:09.5 | us to chat today. Oh, thanks for having me. |
| 1:11.7 | Tell us about your new book, I think, for some folks who are familiar with your work, they might |
| 1:17.2 | be surprised to hear that you've been so interested in tuberculosis. Yeah, it's certainly a change |
| 1:23.5 | from writing young adult novels. I became obsessed with tuberculosis in 2019 when I visited a |
| 1:31.1 | TB hospital in Sierra Leone and met a boy living with tuberculosis who shared a name with my |
| 1:36.4 | son, Henry. Through my friendship with Henry, I really started to think differently about the disease |
| 1:41.8 | and started to think that the disease in some ways is an exemplification of everything that's wrong with the way we've distributed resources and technology |
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