Pulse: Origins
What Didn't End in 1353: The Second Plague Pandemic ran from 1347 to 1815, and a Sicilian child born in the generation of the American Revolution grew up with the Black Death as a present danger. Humans cannot acquire long-term immunity to Yersinia pestis, meaning every generation born after 1347 was as vulnerable as the one that lived through it — and in Bombay in 1896, human mortality rates increased for a full decade before falling, not because the human population had changed, but because the rat population had. Austin and Roman trace what the plague's wrong explanations left standing: legal records of exclusion that correlated with Nazi-era violence in cities with no Jewish community for six centuries, secular universities founded to solve a clergy shortage, and a vernacular literature whose argument about whether it should exist was already lost before it was made. 00:00 — Pandemic continuity: the Second Plague Pandemic runs to 1815 04:10 — Human immunity failure and the Bombay 1896 mortality curve 08:45 — Florence's quarantine: correct practice, wrong theory, five centuries of use 13:20 — Secular universities as workforce responses to clerical collapse 18:00 — Boccaccio's Tuscan vernacular as a statement about institutional access 22:30 — Jewish migration east and the second serfdom converging in one geography 27:15 — Voigtländer and Voth: pogrom correlation persists in cities vacant of Jews for 600 years 33:40 — Institutional inertia: structures outlasting every carrier who built them 38:55 — Rats acquire resistance; the pandemic ends through a mechanism nobody could see 43:10 — The plague ended. What it built did not. ---------------------------------------- New episodes every Sunday. Follow us on X @ThePulseSPN [https://x.com/ThePulseSPN] singularitypulse.substack.com [https://singularitypulse.substack.com]
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