1.
PRIOR HISTORY OF THE "GERM THEORY"
If you back into the history of the medical profession and the various ideas regarding
the cause of disease that were held by leading physicians before Pasteur first promulgated
his notorious "germ theory", you will find convincing evidence that Pasteur
discovered nothing, and that he deliberately appropriated, falsified and perverted another
man's work.
The 'germ theory', so-called, long antedated Pasteur - so long, in fact, that he was
able to present it as new; and he got away with it!
F. Harrison, Principal Professor of Bacteriology at Macdonald College (Faculty of
Agriculture, McGill University), Quebec, Canada, wrote an Historical Review of
Microbiology, published in Microbiology, a text book, in which he says in part:
"Geronimo Fracastorio (an Italian poet and physician, 1483 - 1553) of Verona,
published a work (De Contagionibus et Contagiosis Morbis, et eorum Curatione) in Venice in
1546 which contained the first statement of the true nature of contagion, infection, or
disease organisms, and of the modes of transmission of infectious disease. He divided
diseases into those which infect by immediate contact, through intermediate agents, and at
a distance through the air. Organisms which cause disease, called seminaria contagionum,
he supposed to be of the nature of viscous or glutinous matter, similar to the colloidal
states of substances described by modern physical chemists. These particles, too small to
be seen, were capable of reproduction in appropriate media, and became pathogenic through
the action of animal heat. Thus Fracastorio, in the middle of the sixteenth century, gave
us an outline of morbid processes in terms of microbiology."
For a book published more than three hundred years before Pasteur 'discovered' the germ
theory, this seems to be a most astonishing anticipation of Pasteur's ideas, except that -
not having a microscope - Fracastorio apparently did not realize that these substances
might be individual living organisms.
According to Harrison, the first compound microscope was made by H. Jansen in 1590 in
Holland, but it was not until about 1683 that anything was built of sufficient power to
show up bacteria. He continues:
"In the year 1683, Antonius van Leenwenhoek, a Dutch naturalist and a maker of
lenses, communicated to the English Royal Society the results of observations which he had
made with a simple microscope of his own construction, magnifying from 100 to 150 times.
He found in water saliva, dental tartar, etc., what he termed animalcula. He described
what he saw, and in his drawings showed both rod-like and spiral form, both of which he
said had motility. In all probability, the two species he saw were those now recognized as
bacillus buccalis maximus and spirillum sputigenum.
Leenwenhoek's observations were purely objective and in striking contrast with the
speculative views of M. A. Plenciz, a Viennese physician, who in 1762 published a germ
theory of infectious diseases. Plenciz maintained that there was a special organism by
which each infectious disease was produced, that micro-organisms were capable of
reproduction outside of the body, and that they might be conveyed from place to place by
the air."
Here is Pasteur's great thought in toto - his complete germ theory - and put in print
over a century before Pasteur thought of it(?), or published it as his own!
Note how concisely it anticipates all Pasteur's ideas on germs. While there seems to be
no proof that Plenciz had a microscope, or knew of Leenwenhoek's animalcula, both are
possible, and likely, as he was quite prominent; and he, rather than Pasteur, should have
any credit that might come from such a discovery - if the germ theory has any value. This
idea, which, to the people of that time at least, must have accounted easily and
completely for such strange occurrences as contagion, infection and epidemics, would have
been widely discussed in the medical or scientific circles of that time, and in literature
available to Pasteur.
That it was widely known is indicated by the fact that the world-famous English nurse,
Florence Nightingale, published an attack on the idea in 1860, over 17 years before
Pasteur adopted it and claimed it as his own.
She said of 'infection':
Diseases are not individuals arranged in classes, like cats and dogs, but conditions
growing out of one another.
Is it not living in a continual mistake to look upon diseases as we do now, as separate
entities, which must exist, like cats and dogs, instead of looking upon them as
conditions, like a dirty and a clean condition, and just as much under our control; or
rather as the reactions of kindly nature, against the conditions in which we have placed
ourselves?
I was brought up to believe that smallpox, for instance, was a thing of which there was
once a first specimen in the world, which went on propagating itself, in a perpetual chain
of descent, just as there was a first dog, (or a first pair of dogs) and that smallpox
would not begin itself, any more than a new dog would begin without there having been a
parent dog.
Since then I have seen with my own eyes and smelled with my own nose smallpox growing
up in first specimens, either in closed rooms or in overcrowded wards, where it could not
by any possibility have been 'caught', but must have begun.
I have seen diseases begin, grow up, and pass into one another. Now, dogs do not pass
into cats.
I have seen, for instance, with a little overcrowding, continued fever grow up; and
with a little more, typhoid fever; and with a little more, typhus, and all in the same
ward or hut.
Would it not be far better, truer, and more practical, if we looked upon disease in
this light (for diseases, as all experience shows, are adjectives, not noun-substantives):
- True nursing ignores infection, except to prevent it. Cleanliness and fresh air from
open windows, with unremitting attention to the patient, are the only defence a true nurse
either asks or needs.
- Wise and humane management of the patient is the best safeguard against infection.
The greater part of nursing consists of preserving cleanliness.
- The specific disease doctrine is the grand refuge of weak, uncultured, unstable
minds, such as now rule in the medical profession. There are no specific diseases; there
are specific disease conditions."
Here you have Florence Nightingale, one of the most famous nurses in history, after
life-long experience with infection, contagion and epidemics, challenging the germ theory
17 years before Pasteur put it forward as his own discovery! (See Ch.8, p.61).
She clearly understood it and its utter fallacy better before 1860 than Pasteur did,
either in 1878 or later!
And, to see what a parasite Pasteur was on men who did things, let us digress and go
back a few years, to the time when the study of germs was an outgrowth of the study of
fermentation.
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