This is not simply a matter of discomfort. Extreme heat is a public health emergency. When temperatures climb beyond what the human body can regulate, its cooling systems begin to fail. The most vulnerable – older people, those with chronic illnesses and anyone without reliable access to cooling – bear the heaviest burden.
I have a surprisingly low tolerance for heat for someone who spent his formative years on a tropical island, and I was surprised to find myself emerging from those two infernal weeks in Prague with both health and sanity intact.
So, how did societies in the past develop their own responses to summer’s excesses without mechanical cooling? In premodern China, coping with heat was a well-honed practice, blending material ingenuity with aesthetic and philosophical adaptation.
Coolness was not only found in chilled delicacies, clever engineering or escape, but in achieving a sense of peace and balance within oneself
