In a little less than two centuries—from the late 1830s, when the scientists Matthias Schleiden and Theodor Schwann proposed that all animal and plant tissues were made of cells, to the spring of Emily’s recovery—a radical concept swept through biology and medicine, touching virtually every aspect of the two sciences, and altering both forever. Complex living organisms were assemblages of tiny, self-contained, self-regulating units—living compartments, if you will, or “living atoms,” as the Dutch microscopist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek called them in 1676. Humans were ecosystems of these living
...more

