How a few scientists transformed the way we think about disease - Tien Nguyen

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  • čas přidán 19. 10. 2015
  • View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/how-a-few-s...
    This video was created with support from the U.S. Office of Research Integrity: ori.hhs.gov.
    For several centuries, people though diseases were caused by wandering clouds of poisonous vapor. We now know that this theory is pretty ridiculous, and that diseases are caused by specific bacteria. But how did we get to this new idea of germ theory? Tien Nguyen describes the work of several scientists who discredited a widely accepted theory in a way that was beneficial to human health.
    Lesson by Tien Nguyen, animation by Brandon Denmark.

Komentáře • 1K

  • @jaredandfreindsgames
    @jaredandfreindsgames Před 8 lety +450

    Who animated this and give them a raise because this looks so good

    • @OnyxtheFortuitous
      @OnyxtheFortuitous Před 8 lety +4

      +jared tillman Right? The animation was cleeeean

    • @robinsonj.lawrence6064
      @robinsonj.lawrence6064 Před 8 lety +10

      +jared tillman Please read the descriptions, they are always usefull.

    • @piluex2
      @piluex2 Před 8 lety +5

      yeah, they design of the characters looks very good too,I dont know why,but it remind me a little bit to jojo's

    • @piluex2
      @piluex2 Před 8 lety

      +piluex2 *the

    • @Acc8441
      @Acc8441 Před 7 lety +1

      jared tillman y

  • @yasirazhari3794
    @yasirazhari3794 Před 7 lety +461

    Is anyone else concerned about the lady that said she liked the taste of shit water?

    • @mihi4136
      @mihi4136 Před 4 lety +6

      damn

    • @potatok123
      @potatok123 Před 4 lety +41

      hey don’t kink shame

    • @mihi4136
      @mihi4136 Před 4 lety +1

      @@potatok123 true true HAHAH

    • @p.jhodeflea789
      @p.jhodeflea789 Před 3 lety +5

      Coca cola was not yet invented 😣

    • @AF-ib8ec
      @AF-ib8ec Před 3 lety +7

      Wasn't that the entire plot theme of the award winning highly acclaimed film 2 girls 1 cup ?

  • @physioweng
    @physioweng Před 8 lety +311

    A question is an excellent way to start, yet we are socially pressured not to question or be skeptical to what is taught to us most of the time.

    • @physioweng
      @physioweng Před 8 lety +25

      Malaysia, a muslim country in the Asia Pacific. I'm a Chinese and also an atheist so I'm quite the minority here. My parents, friends and schools are not very supportive of critical thinking.

    • @Szabados-Gergely
      @Szabados-Gergely Před 8 lety +4

      +Kar Weng Hungary - Atheist
      the country has many kinds of different peaceful religions - only the goverment is pushing it a bit in talks
      the scool system is set up over trivial knowledge - and has little to negative funding
      altho in many places the scools are alright, and there are private level but govermental (free for the best - we get you in if youre good) ones, but a lot of them are just barely ok
      oh yes, and discrimination against gypsies - almost forgot that one... a lot of them just didnt blend in at all

    • @loriefranceschi2590
      @loriefranceschi2590 Před 8 lety

      +Kar Weng It did not used to be that way. the bible was part of the education system also. We have seen what happened in that category. Asking a question is frowned upon 99% of the time now in schools. Mainly, new teachers are not taught what they need to know in the subjects they teach. Look at Math, by the time kids are in middle school, they are so dependent on calculators, they can not do their math facts (multiplication facts of two one digit numbers) without one.

    • @EdwinLuciano
      @EdwinLuciano Před 8 lety +5

      +Lorie Franceschi The Bible still is part of the educational system in my country, the United States. If you want your child to learn about the Bible in school, you have the perfect right to send your child to a parochial school. The Churches who run them don't even have to pay taxes.
      But in my country, the United States, we have a set of laws, called the Constitution, which prohibits the government from getting into the religion business. So governments cannot fund public schools which promote religion and therefore public schools promote no religion of any kind. That's what religious schools are for.
      If you cannot afford to send your child to a religious school or you do not have access to a religious school that you would want your child to attend, you can always have your child learn about the Bible at Church or at home - parents and homes are part of your children's education too!
      It's my understanding that some organizations hand out the "Good Book" for free.
      At home and at Church is where most people learned about the Bible for most of history since the Bible was canonized. That's where *I* learned about the Bible and I think it's a perfectly fine place to learn about the Bible. Bibles in schools are a relatively new invention.

    • @loriefranceschi2590
      @loriefranceschi2590 Před 8 lety

      +Edwin Luciano My statement was about the public education system. The teaching of evolution was frowned upon for most of our country's life. It was not until the 1958 National Defense Education Act signed by President Eisenhower. this Act came about because our federal elected leaders were afraid that the USA was falling behind the USSR in education.
      I do not need to be told that I could send my children to a religious school. I do not need to be told that I am responsible for teaching my children the morals that are taught in the Bible. Please be so kind to get off your high horse about telling me what i need to do with my children. You are not part of my family and really have no say as to what I teach my children. Besides the "NE" generation, telling people how to raise their children is part of the problem we have today in this country. Good Day.

  • @OnyxtheFortuitous
    @OnyxtheFortuitous Před 8 lety +380

    It must have been so incredibly frustrating for John Snow to present blatant evidence for germ theory and against miasma theory and *_still_* have people not believe him just because they were so stuck on old outdated teachings and ideologies.

    • @OnyxtheFortuitous
      @OnyxtheFortuitous Před 8 lety +27

      +Nereid As a side note, the animation for this was really well done. :)

    • @icarus6492
      @icarus6492 Před 8 lety +31

      Well, we can't blame the conservative scientists at that time as well. because to them, the miasma theory was already common sense and germ theory was just another hypothesis that is trying to challenge this age old "infallible" theory. the people of today may find it odd why people back then would believe that, but thats only because now the germ theory is what our generation call common sense. but yeah, gotta feel sorry for Snow.

    • @Wolcik3000
      @Wolcik3000 Před 8 lety +24

      +Nereid Well, nobody have seen the whitewalkers for ages, and wildlings were a constant enemy thorugh ages. No wonder Snow had a hard time appealing to the council.

    • @icarus6492
      @icarus6492 Před 8 lety +3

      +Paweł Wolnicki dude. you just blew my mind

    • @OnyxtheFortuitous
      @OnyxtheFortuitous Před 8 lety +5

      +Paweł Wolnicki Brilliant X'D

  • @ZEbelgiumfreak
    @ZEbelgiumfreak Před 8 lety +766

    So turns out John Snow did know something?

  • @ghufranullah
    @ghufranullah Před 8 lety +257

    John Snow: "It's the GERMS!!"
    Officials: "You know nothing,John Snow!"

  • @NerdSyncProductions
    @NerdSyncProductions Před 8 lety +73

    4:08 is something I think about all the time.

    • @i_wouldprefer_not_to1196
      @i_wouldprefer_not_to1196 Před 3 lety +4

      I think that's a thought crime don't ya know? 😉

    • @shadstewart9253
      @shadstewart9253 Před 3 lety +11

      Read the invisible Rainbow, Good Bye Germ Theory and The Contagion Myth and find out.

    • @sonic1k
      @sonic1k Před 2 lety +1

      Our descendants will see religion, fossils fuels, and our financial systen as anti progression

  • @cjlooklin1914
    @cjlooklin1914 Před 8 lety +132

    You know something John Snow!

  • @flensdude
    @flensdude Před 8 lety +293

    The doctor's name was seriously John Snow? Man, the joke writes itself.

    • @gabbonoo
      @gabbonoo Před 8 lety +5

      +flensdude | pTarian you know ..something.. john snow. *dies*

    • @FatNonsense
      @FatNonsense Před 8 lety +9

      +flensdude | pTarian
      Why does the joke writes itself? I'm sure you are referring to the phrase "You know nothing, Jon Snow". Even if he didn't discover the cholera bacteria he was a supporter of the germ theory and was so much on the right track on finding out what causes the Cholera disease. It's just the authorities that were to stubborn to believe him.
      Unfortunately Dr. John Snow died at the age of 45 by a stroke. He probably would have proven his theory himself (not Robert Koch) if life would have given him a little more time :(

    • @xenojobeia
      @xenojobeia Před 8 lety +13

      +FatNonsense ok ill wrote it for you. John snow :" disease is caused by germs!" city officials "you know nothing John snow "

    • @gabbonoo
      @gabbonoo Před 8 lety +8

      FatNonsense
      the joke is alluding to a known quote. quotes are essentially established in the past so knowing the quote means your memory writes the joke by association.

    • @1-upshroom682
      @1-upshroom682 Před 5 lety

      r/woooosh?

  • @6heartvirtues442
    @6heartvirtues442 Před 4 lety +146

    People should rethink the whole Germ theory. Research Bechamp or Pasteur?

    • @andrewkendall7814
      @andrewkendall7814 Před 4 lety +38

      Yes, even more relevant right now. If it weren't for investigating the so-called science of viruses as a result of this Covid I would have been none the wiser.

    • @alexkaapa
      @alexkaapa Před 4 lety +8

      @@andrewkendall7814 you clearly are scientifically literate

    • @aadithyanarayanan2978
      @aadithyanarayanan2978 Před 3 lety +3

      Germ theory is not the most accepted one right now...
      But it was the earliest theory that made some sense...
      Hence the video..

    • @alexkaapa
      @alexkaapa Před 3 lety +11

      @@aadithyanarayanan2978 i definitely still is the most accepted. how do you think this video in any way shows that it isn't?

    • @RwP223
      @RwP223 Před 3 lety +10

      There are [Theories: germs cause sickness], and then there are [Facts: if you stop breathing nitrogen/oxygen, you perish]

  • @harshify
    @harshify Před 8 lety +85

    "You know nothing, John Snow"

  • @OmegaSpider227
    @OmegaSpider227 Před 3 lety +39

    5 years on and I still can't believe a single person animated this! Brandon Denmark, you are superbly talented!

  • @MrManifolder
    @MrManifolder Před 8 lety +25

    John Snow: "LISTEN! There are microscopic organisms in that pump's water which are most likely the cause of this outbreak. We can save countless lives if we just..."
    Medical Establishment: "YOU KNOW NOTHING, JOHN SNOW!"
    John Snow (under his breath) :"Why do they always say that?"

  • @bobbystanley8580
    @bobbystanley8580 Před 6 lety +23

    I was wondering about what beliefs we have today will be proven wrong in the future

  • @Matumark
    @Matumark Před 3 lety +33

    "A question is an excellent place to start." - That's true, even though most people who love this video will probably ridicule those who dare to ask questions.

    • @alexanderphilip1809
      @alexanderphilip1809 Před 3 lety +3

      Asking questions when the answer is obvious and empirically evident would naturally invite ridicule unless ofcourse its proven true in hindsight.

    • @SevScout
      @SevScout Před 3 lety +4

      @@alexanderphilip1809 Good job rationalizing ridicule of scientific inquiry! You are DEFINITELY the cream of the lot.
      I'd like to see your empirical evidence and obvious answers, before you go ahead and laugh at anyone but yourself, though. Since the public has barely any way of confirming anything the authorities on the matter say, it becomes a subject of faith, rather than science, if ya ask me.

    • @alexanderphilip1809
      @alexanderphilip1809 Před 3 lety +3

      @@SevScout I'd prefer Science over Faith.

    • @alexanderphilip1809
      @alexanderphilip1809 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SevScout wasnt advocating for rationalizing stupidity or blind faith. You fail to see my point and what i said was a mere observation and in noway a rebuke of "asking questions". The fact that we were watching this video now shows that we were looking for answers which would require us to figure out the questions to ask in the first place.Unless ofcourse this was recommended.

    • @SevScout
      @SevScout Před 3 lety +2

      @@alexanderphilip1809 Yeah, so you didn't address my point. Which is, due to not being able to first hand confirm any of the empirically evident/obvious answers, the basis of your knowledge IS faith based. You BELIEVE the authorities that you BELIEVE IN. Address an actual point for a change, instead of dodging with what equates to corporate speech!

  • @irminmannus9079
    @irminmannus9079 Před 4 lety +73

    “Le microbe n’est rien, le terrain est tout.” (The microbe is nothing, the terrain is everything) -The last words of Louis Pasteur

    • @vilieatthefarm1703
      @vilieatthefarm1703 Před 4 lety +11

      Read 'Béchamp or Pasteur A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology' by Ethel Hume

    • @alexkaapa
      @alexkaapa Před 4 lety +2

      last words are always extremely insightful. sure...

    • @feeknocks
      @feeknocks Před 3 lety +25

      @@alexkaapa Lamentations of a fraudster coming clean in his last moments

    • @stefanmilicevic5322
      @stefanmilicevic5322 Před 11 měsíci

      @@vilieatthefarm1703 A work of propaganda is not insightful in any way, it is just a prejudicial diatribe.
      "Hume's book has been cited by proponents of alternative medicine but was criticized by historians."
      "In 1924, a review in the Nature journal commented that "the solid fact remains that most of [Béchamp's] work has been discredited as inaccurate, and although he wrote an immense amount, he plunged deeper and deeper into error. However high the opinion of the author is on the virtues of Bechamp, he has utilised a fair part of the book to exploit his own antimicrobic and antivaccination views." In 1928, William Fearon stated that the book "is written in a somewhat peevish style, and appears to be more concerned with the defects of Pasteur than the merits of Bechamp". In 1934, a review in The Quarterly Review of Biology dismissed the book as a "bit of anti-vivisection and anti-vaccination propaganda". A review in the Isis journal the same year, described the book as an attack upon Pasteur and to discredit vaccination. The review concluded that "the emotional basis, the intellectual feebleness, and the anti-scientific and anti-social character of the whole anti-medical movement is superbly illustrated in the motivation and in the pseudo-scientific and ofttimes painfully unintelligent content of this subsidized book of propaganda."" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._Douglas_Hume#:~:text=In%201924%2C%20a,book%20of%20propaganda.

  • @paulmahoney7619
    @paulmahoney7619 Před 2 lety +9

    I see people prattling on about Terrain Theory, yet not one of them has pointed to any successes of Terrain Theory that compare to the Antibiotic Revolution or the eradication of Smallpox. All they talk about are books, health products, and lifestyles.

    • @tjellis1479
      @tjellis1479 Před 2 lety +2

      Has any of these "Viruses" occurred in modern times among healthy environments?
      Small Pox and Measles vaccines arrived at the nadir the said "viruses"
      Viruses NONE of them....have been scientifically "isolated" purified and passed on to healthy hosts for infection. NONE. Unless you change the definition of vaccine and virus.....Germ Theory FAILS to thrive

    • @SC-gw8np
      @SC-gw8np Před 2 lety +1

      Antibiotic resistance is a growing problem, neither are vaccines very efficacious at creating antibodies and preventing disease transmission. Human health is deteriorating year after year. I can’t see the success.🤷‍♀️

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 2 lety

      @@SC-gw8np I see the success in the century where death by infectious disease collapsed and we eradicated smallpox.

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SC-gw8np also you got any studies that support the claim about vaccines? And I was unaware that literally everywhere the upward trend in lifespan reversed.

    • @SC-gw8np
      @SC-gw8np Před 2 lety +1

      @@paulmahoney7619 There’s no consensus among scholars that infectious disease was eradicated due to antibiotics alone. Better sanitation and housing was a huge factor, which is why infectious diseases still prevail in underdeveloped regions like parts of Africa.

  • @Cool-Danny
    @Cool-Danny Před 3 lety +34

    4:08 "What are the widely held scientific beliefs of today that our descendants will find ridiculous?" Well lets see er-hem... GERM THEORY!!!!

  • @jaenyc263
    @jaenyc263 Před 2 lety +55

    By contrast, Pasteur’s friend, physiologist Claude Bernard, taught that the ‘terrain’ of the human body was more important than the ‘pathogens’ that infect it. We are surrounded by, and even harbor, microorganisms in our bodies. When exposed to pathogens, we become ill if our defenses are weakened by deficiencies or toxicities. Unlike the germ theory, the terrain theory explains why some people get sick while others, when exposed to the same pathogens, do not. For this reason, it is said that on his death bed, Pasteur admitted, “Bernard was right: the pathogen is nothing, the terrain is everything.”

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 2 lety +9

      What medical revolutions has Terrain Theory created? Has it created anything that has saved as many lives as antibiotics?

    • @jaenyc263
      @jaenyc263 Před 2 lety +8

      @@paulmahoney7619 antibiotics lol. Antibodies are the creation of big pharm to create customers like the sheeples.
      You don’t sell the drug, you sell the disease.
      - George Merck, Founder of Merck Pharmaceuticals

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 2 lety +10

      @@jaenyc263 you haven’t answered my question. What life-saving innovations have been developed using terrain theory. Diseases like tuberculosis had effective treatments developed for the first time with the help of Germ theory and antibiotics. Smallpox was eradicated with vaccines and germ theory. Name me one disease for which we got an effective treatment, cure, or prevention for that was successfully and consistently deployed like the smallpox vaccine or tuberculosis treatments. Give me actual, peer-reviewed, clinically-studied, practical treatments. You can moan on and on about what pharmaceutical companies do, but if you can’t treat with terrain theory what you can with germ theory, then it’s fairly obvious what we should use.

    • @jaenyc263
      @jaenyc263 Před 2 lety +10

      @@paulmahoney7619 if u asking in what way terrain theory helped develop innovations then u don’t understand what terrain theory is. The robust human body has the most evolved immune system which adapts and reinforces when encountering foreign substances.
      The body does not need any foreign substances such as antibiotics, vaccines, etc. The system has programmed the sheeples to be even scared of their own shadow lol.
      I was born at home never been inoculated ever with any substance and still ticking at 48 yrs. Clean the fish bowl but don’t jab the fish.
      Pasteur has renounced the germ theory and admitted that his rival was right all along…saying ‘The microbe is nothing, the terrain is everything’.

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 2 lety

      @@jaenyc263 and yet, for millennia the biggest killers included bacterial infection from when we had good diets as hunter-gatherers to the invention of antibiotics and infectious diseases like smallpox which killed three hundred million people in the twentieth century alone. Tell them that all they need is to clean their metaphorical tanks, not medicine. If infectious disease is not a killer, why have measures developed based on the theory that they are worked so well? If terrain theory was accurate, someone somewhere would use it to do something useful since that’s the point of science.

  • @wingsonthebus
    @wingsonthebus Před 8 lety +4

    This is my favorite Ted-Ed animation style ever!

  • @blueberrychocolate4238
    @blueberrychocolate4238 Před 4 lety +11

    The art style is really pretty in this video!

  • @merrymachiavelli2041
    @merrymachiavelli2041 Před 8 lety +20

    Although its worth noting that widely-held scientific beliefs nowadays, whilst not perfect, are likely to have a lot more behind them than what was acceptable back them.
    I'm not saying all commonly-excepted truths today are 100% spot on, but videos like this one suggest more uncertainty than there actually is.

    • @LTB8040
      @LTB8040 Před 8 lety

      How is that so? The video is just presenting facts.

    • @EdwinLuciano
      @EdwinLuciano Před 8 lety

      +Merry Machiavelli The last line in the video gave me the same impression. The whole "which theories that are accepted today are crap?" question suggests that there may be big reversals in commonly accepted theories.
      I think it was Richard Feynman who said that keeping an open mind was good but no so open that your brains fell out.

    • @LTB8040
      @LTB8040 Před 8 lety +1

      Throughout history we have been learning that our beliefs are wrong all the time. What are the odds that at exactly this time in history we have come a point where almost everything we know is true? That has never been the case and I doubt that it suddenly is.
      We can still use our models of reality as long as they predict what we see, but we have to be ready to accept new models if they are more accurate than the old ones.

    • @EdwinLuciano
      @EdwinLuciano Před 8 lety

      +Lukas Berglund I'm not a historian but I know that for a long time in the Western world what was "true" about the natural world was "true" because of what authorities on the subject said was "true."
      Then Galileo came along and turned the way we found out what was "true" on its head.
      So it's no surprise to me that many things we believed in the past, especially before the Scientific Revolution are now shown to be false, because the way we find out what's true and false changed thanks to the Scientific Revolution.
      But as we make our way into a scientific way of looking at nature (I know Dr John Snow lived centuries after Galileo) I think it's going to be harder and harder to do what Dr Snow did: change the way everybody thought about a widely accepted natural occurrence.
      I say that with the knowledge that many people still believe that you catch a cold if you don't bundle up in the winter. Old ideas die hard. But scientists know and accept that it is a viral infectious disease that just happens to be more common in winter for a host of reasons.

    • @LTB8040
      @LTB8040 Před 8 lety +1

      Today it's been more a good 400 years since the Scientific revoluton, but it's been shown that everything we believed in physics a hundred years ago is wrong through quantum physics. A core philosophy of rationality is that nothing can be known for sure. As Stephen Hawking said in a brief history of time: "Any theory is always provisional, in the sense that it is only a hypothesis: you can never prove it. No matter how many times the results of experiments agree with some theory, you can never be sure that the next time the result will not contradict the theory."
      Of course some theories work so well that you don't have to consider them being untrue when using them, but we shouldn't repeat the mistake shown in the video and refuse to consider a countertheory when there is evidence for it.

  • @011azr
    @011azr Před 8 lety +3

    I keep thinking of new age method or something. For centuries, our way of research is way too rigid to the point that Tesla even said something like "if only science could take supernatural or spiritual things into account, we would be 100 years ahead in technology".

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 7 lety +1

      011azr the reason the scientific method is the way it is is because it insures only repeatable results are confirmed. They have not considered the supernatural because no claim has passed the Method.

    • @011azr
      @011azr Před 7 lety

      Lord Inquisitor Yeah, I know. I'm a computer science undergraduate, but I really hope that the non physical things can be observed. I swear to God, I've seen a lot of things beyond the scope of things that can be sensed. I've experienced how real the kundalini in yoga is and how real it is to be able to manipulate other people subconscious mind to like me. I hate pseudoscience nonsense too, but I know how real it is, that you can seduce 10 different people in real time to keep staring at you and never letting go. Yeah, you may not believe it until you try it yourself. It's amazing and scary how much our mind is capable to manipulate the stuff around us.

  • @tflo75
    @tflo75 Před 3 lety +41

    "the microbe is nothing...the terrain is everything." ~ Louis Pasteur
    "cell biology is a bunch of magic half the time - people who claim they can do quantitative estimations from cultures of HIV are just fooling themselves." Kary Mullis (Inventor of PCR)

    • @Owlhousespecial
      @Owlhousespecial Před 3 lety

      Wow that's good info to know. Thank you. I'm going to share her quote

    • @GrizZLyGuy
      @GrizZLyGuy Před 3 lety +5

      Someone who’s actually done some research. Love it

    • @LuchadorMasque
      @LuchadorMasque Před 3 lety +6

      Dr. Fauci would disagree

    • @keisi1574
      @keisi1574 Před 3 lety

      @@Owlhousespecial Kary Mullis is a he. Here he is:
      czcams.com/video/Xc0Kysti6Kc/video.html

    • @Superstylerlegit
      @Superstylerlegit Před rokem

      @@Owlhousespecial its a man

  • @spineshivers
    @spineshivers Před 8 lety +23

    Not the same name. John Snow is not Jon Snow, without the H. John is its own name. Jon is short from Jonathan. lol

  • @WalkOnNick
    @WalkOnNick Před 8 lety +59

    Kudos to the narrator for saying "Koch" correctly and not pronouncing it "cock" or "coach".

    • @WalkOnNick
      @WalkOnNick Před 8 lety +14

      *****
      Important enough for me to have taken these valuable seconds out of my life to point it out, yes.

    • @WalkOnNick
      @WalkOnNick Před 8 lety +2

      shimble scuse
      Yes, I noticed that right after I had written my comment.. : /

    • @bibekgautam512
      @bibekgautam512 Před 8 lety

      +BuFufilms Came across Robert Koch a few times in High School, everyone I Knew pronounced it as "coach".

    • @juanpablomina1346
      @juanpablomina1346 Před 8 lety +1

      +shimble scuse How? I seriously think their pronunciation was good enough. Yes, it wasn't perfect, but I thought it was pretty good for someone who clearly isn't a French-speaker.

    • @dodominoe4461
      @dodominoe4461 Před 4 lety

      @@juanpablomina1346 *german-speaker.
      Yes I don't care that your comment is four years old

  • @lameiraangelo
    @lameiraangelo Před 3 lety +1

    Wow, amazing explanation...

  • @Jerytheorc
    @Jerytheorc Před 2 lety +2

    2:01 it mentions that germ theory was unpopular (which is was when it was published) but in 1854 when snow made his link it would be another 7 years till Germ theory was published by Pasture (1861) which means that there was no need to mention Germ theory in this portion of the video

  • @ahmadhadder9834
    @ahmadhadder9834 Před 8 lety +24

    Keep Ego out of science!

  • @zikfocus
    @zikfocus Před 2 lety +5

    Germ theory does not necessary applies to viruses. Germs and viruses interact with environment in different way. Viruses can infect germs but not other way around. Terrain theory has plausibility when it comes to viruses as they can't proliferate without the host, suitable environment. Again, other way around for germs

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před 2 lety +1

      Nope that's a straight lie. You ever heard of Molecular Koch's postulates?

  • @Alihunayn
    @Alihunayn Před 5 lety +1

    the question is an excellent place to start.... Obsviously

  • @kyrudo
    @kyrudo Před 8 lety +12

    Holy cow!... Nice lesson and all, but wow. The animation in this one is amazing and cool! Kudos to Brandon! Youve made a new fan!

  • @davidagainstgoliath2969
    @davidagainstgoliath2969 Před 3 lety +69

    Except on his death bed, Louis Pasteur admitted that, “Bernard was right: the pathogen is nothing, the terrain is everything.”

    • @mariamelshayeb6734
      @mariamelshayeb6734 Před 2 lety

      hmm

    • @curtisreeveslackore
      @curtisreeveslackore Před 2 lety +3

      And let's not forget we don't use Koch's postulates anymore because it's too faulty

    • @alifr4088
      @alifr4088 Před 2 lety

      But hey, at least they both became the first to go to the right path lol

    • @limitslines9896
      @limitslines9896 Před 2 lety

      Terrain theory is everything ... You can watch the documentary terrain and it explains the fraud behind germ theory

  • @sciencelover2342
    @sciencelover2342 Před 8 lety +15

    This is the perfect video to show that no hypothesis is too absurd. If one has enough evidence for it, the hypothesis shouldn't be ignored or ridiculed. Yet it will probably still happen.

  • @justindavis6406
    @justindavis6406 Před rokem +3

    I really want to find a way to believe they named Germs after Germany

  • @Turbininh0
    @Turbininh0 Před 8 lety +2

    The animation was sooooo good in this video wow
    Love the drawing style too

  • @tchecobrno
    @tchecobrno Před 8 lety +5

    You know everything "John Snow"

  • @LordGrimmie
    @LordGrimmie Před 8 lety +3

    Bravo Brandon Denmark, excellent animation!

  • @hemadharshiniv.t.6003
    @hemadharshiniv.t.6003 Před 3 lety

    I have always liked ur videos

  • @rdrpro69
    @rdrpro69 Před 2 lety +1

    4:20 “a question is a good place to start” unless you live in 2020-2021

  • @gerriehat
    @gerriehat Před 3 lety +29

    Bechamp’s Terrain Theory for me

  • @georgewidger2306
    @georgewidger2306 Před 3 lety +3

    What about terrain theory?

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před rokem

      Nothing but mad ramblings of a drug addled charlatan. Seriously just looking at Bechamp's microzyma shows how utterly detached from reality he was. How can all microbes be one species when any highschool student can destroy that claim by running a gel electrophoresis and compare the DNA bands of different microbes and see how different they are.

    • @goatwarrior3570
      @goatwarrior3570 Před měsícem

      It's a disproven hoax.

  • @jonphinguyen
    @jonphinguyen Před 2 lety +2

    Any chance on making a video about terrain theory?

  • @salvadoremtransicao4406
    @salvadoremtransicao4406 Před 2 lety +1

    A teoria a ser questionada é a própria teoria dos germes, que não q seja verdadeira mas é incompleta... é preciso levar em consideração a Teoria do Terreno Biológico de Bechamp

  • @muslimahsharing4761
    @muslimahsharing4761 Před 3 lety +5

    My question would be, why did this germs theory appear when i type to search for the terrain theory???? Suspicious.

    • @nicolasmachuca2743
      @nicolasmachuca2743 Před 3 lety +3

      Very suspicious. The elite want to deceive people and prevent them from knowing the truth.

    • @jaberwasp1925
      @jaberwasp1925 Před 3 lety +2

      True!!! They’re censoring, hiding and deleting anything that’s not germ theory stuff.

    • @thisch666
      @thisch666 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jaberwasp1925 Oh yes yes yes another conspiracy theory ! Wowowow so exciting... the elite are so mean.. oh wow, they want you to believe the earth is a globe and germs are real, but you KNOW the real truth. I mean come one, get a life...

  • @henriquepimentagomes
    @henriquepimentagomes Před 8 lety +3

    Actually the first ever scientist to isolate the cholera bacteria was the Italian Filippo Pacini in 1854. I don't mean to sound annoying, it's just that quite often English and American scientists and inventors take credit for achieving things they weren't really responsible for, or didn't do alone.

    • @ryanrosenblum2552
      @ryanrosenblum2552 Před 8 měsíci

      I know it's a bit pedantic but Robert Koch was German and quite frankly I believe he was credited was because through his culturing techniques he was able to consistently grow the bacterium in a controlled manner but even then Filippo Pacini's contribution was recognized by the Cholera Commission of the Imperial Health Office in Berlin

  • @itsmeroky
    @itsmeroky Před 4 lety +1

    John Snow has insights.

  • @filmfan4
    @filmfan4 Před 7 lety +1

    But aren't there certain areas of scientific knowledge that are 'untouchable'? How on earth do you even begin to challenge these if they are deemed unquestionably?

  • @majorawol
    @majorawol Před 3 lety +15

    Not allowed questions, actually. Books get censored. See "The Contagion Myth".

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před rokem

      That book is nothing but lies written by a worthless hack how has no clue how the heart works nevermind something as complex as infectious diseases. In fact all he does is bash germ theory and modern medicine while providing no proof for his alternative ludicrous claims.

    • @stefanmilicevic5322
      @stefanmilicevic5322 Před 11 měsíci

      Because it is literally germ theory denialism. Now wonder, society needs to stomp out dangerous misinformation and immune to critical thought conspiracy theories. It would be negligent not to do so.

  • @duckgoesquack4514
    @duckgoesquack4514 Před 8 lety +6

    4:13 i would say global warming would be on top of that list

    • @Tamizushi
      @Tamizushi Před 8 lety

      +Umbr a And why would you say that?

    • @duckgoesquack4514
      @duckgoesquack4514 Před 8 lety +2

      +Kamizushi Akinari because people today think global warming is not real. but with future generations, they would see that thought very ridiculous.
      i see how my first post can go either way :/

    • @Tamizushi
      @Tamizushi Před 8 lety

      Umbr a Fair enough.

  • @oopsy444
    @oopsy444 Před 6 lety +2

    If you liked this and want to know more about this and snow I highly suggest the extra history series by extra credits. It's my favorite series

  • @Werdxp
    @Werdxp Před 8 lety +2

    Yeah there are things we take as fact today that are simply untrue. For example the speed of light isn't actually an exact constant... it's an appropriated average that is treated as some super strict un-changing/un-fluctating law

    • @Silverizael
      @Silverizael Před 8 lety

      +Werdxp It seems to me that you don't properly understand what the speed of light means. The speed involved isn't what it is because light travels at that speed, it is what it is because the properties of physics dictate that that speed is the fastest any information can travel from one place to another. Which is why, for massless particles like photons, they go at exactly that speed, as they aren't hindered by anything else in space.

    • @Werdxp
      @Werdxp Před 8 lety

      This "fastest any information can travel from one place to another" is exactly what I'm talking about. Your entire life you've been taught this under the guise that its completely mathematically consistent when it's not. Check out Rupert Sheldrake's Ted Talk. Though I don't believe in all his theories, he has the attitude down right. No science should be out of the realms of rigourous questioning

    • @juanpablomina1346
      @juanpablomina1346 Před 8 lety

      +Werdxp phys.org/news/2014-09-curious-case-fluctuating.html
      The theory of relativity and electromagnetism work very, very well. And they pretty much need the speed of light in the vacuum to be constant.
      Maybe you refer to something like this: www.iflscience.com/physics/speed-light-can-vary-vacuum
      But in that case, what do you expect professors to teach? "Oh students, we actually know nothing, go home!" Two very basic theories that have ample evidence work well with what is currently taught. Sure, it might me wrong, but as we don't know, we can only teach what seems to work. It's not like it's a math class where you prove everything you say. In a physics class, it's tacit that what they teach you isn't 100% true. I mean, at some point they teach you Newtonian physics and we all know they're not actually right...

  • @paulmag91
    @paulmag91 Před 7 lety +18

    "You know nothing!"
    - John Snow

  • @curiousmindjourney
    @curiousmindjourney Před 3 lety +5

    What about the terrain theory? By Beauchamp? Even Pasteur admitted that Beauchamp got it right.....
    But this video is to reinforce the profitable theory :)

    • @abewilderedcat9877
      @abewilderedcat9877 Před 3 lety

      What’s Terrain theory?

    • @baghiballsakh82
      @baghiballsakh82 Před 3 lety +2

      Sam Alex you're off to a brilliant start. You've obviously done your research and you must be so very familiar with the name 'Beauchamp' by now.
      God bless you terrainers 🤣

    • @thisch666
      @thisch666 Před 2 lety +2

      Oh sure, after the flat earthers, now we have the terrain guys... why are these people so eager to show others they are complete morons ?

  • @letusgather...7820
    @letusgather...7820 Před 4 lety

    Read The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson for details. Great book.

  • @ivicasokolich4022
    @ivicasokolich4022 Před 8 lety +2

    This video really helped me keep it up

  • @PrussiasGirl
    @PrussiasGirl Před 8 lety +4

    interesting

    • @Tyronejizz
      @Tyronejizz Před 8 lety

      you just said something to be third

    • @PrussiasGirl
      @PrussiasGirl Před 8 lety

      +Mabatu Obama what?

    • @Tyronejizz
      @Tyronejizz Před 8 lety

      PrussiasGirl you just typed a comment (Intresting) without any depth or content just to be the 3rd commenter

    • @PrussiasGirl
      @PrussiasGirl Před 8 lety

      +Mabatu Obama no i didnt not i type intersting because the video was interesting i had nothing else to add.

    • @Tyronejizz
      @Tyronejizz Před 8 lety

      PrussiasGirl if you say so...

  • @perlapalupi6908
    @perlapalupi6908 Před 4 lety +8

    “Il terreno è tutto, il microbo è nulla”.

  • @GrizZLyGuy
    @GrizZLyGuy Před 3 lety +1

    A whole video on the discovery of germ theory and not one mention of Beauchamp? Says it all really

  • @fatfrankthepeteacher2503

    Is robert koch the night king?

  • @tavabeingtava7351
    @tavabeingtava7351 Před 8 lety +4

    The miasma theory. The earth is flat theory.. Middle Ages were scary.

    • @yakine259
      @yakine259 Před 8 lety +2

      +DeafeatingPain they obviously didn't know as much as we know, so at least they have an excuse. for example the four element theory. did the philosophers at that time know about atoms?

    • @Jensaw101
      @Jensaw101 Před 8 lety +1

      +Yakine BikeRace Well, the most basic atomic hypothesis arose in ancient greece and/or india. The idea was simply that there existed some small quantity of material that was not itself created from somthing. The argument that I remember reading was that a philosopher cut a piece of food (cheese, meat, etc -- it varies) in half, and then in half again, postulating that eventually there would be a portion of food too small to cut in half -- even with the sharpest and smallest of blade.

    • @tavabeingtava7351
      @tavabeingtava7351 Před 8 lety

      Total agreement. Maybe a few years later people will look over towards the big bang theory as the most ridiculous thing in creation.

    • @yakine259
      @yakine259 Před 8 lety +1

      DeafeatingPain oh yeah great thought you came up with. People might even look back at Einstein 's relativity theory with shame in 30 years, since its technically just a theory. So it could be proven wrong at that time

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Před 4 lety +1

      Flat Earth has been debunked since ancient times

  • @CS-cp8xy
    @CS-cp8xy Před 2 lety +3

    " a question is an excellent place to start" LOL try to ask questions in 2021 and you will be MIA next day .

  • @PsychoBabble2168
    @PsychoBabble2168 Před 8 lety +1

    Amazing animation in this one!!

  • @Shubhenduverma24
    @Shubhenduverma24 Před 4 lety +1

    i have a question ?

  • @TruthSeekersChannel
    @TruthSeekersChannel Před 4 lety +4

    Now the question is, what is the correlation between 5G and Covid-19?

    • @mikeramos91
      @mikeramos91 Před 4 lety +3

      Truth Seekers Channel I came looking for answers, is germ theory legit?

    • @TruthSeekersChannel
      @TruthSeekersChannel Před 4 lety +1

      @@mikeramos91 What is it that you are looking for? Dr Snow was right. I agree with him.

    • @th3gov3rnm3nt
      @th3gov3rnm3nt Před 3 lety

      @@mikeramos91 yes

    • @peterburton3095
      @peterburton3095 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mikeramos91 no germ theory is a lie. Compare germ theory with bechamp's terrain theory. We're in a disinformation war with many shills. Do your own research and you'll find much of what we're taught is based on lies.

    • @thisch666
      @thisch666 Před 2 lety +1

      @@peterburton3095 And you're a conspiracy theories lover. Sooo sick of this "do your own research" stuff, when you actually mean "go in the sewer of the internet and select exclusively conspiracist websites as your only source of information, discard any other source knowledge and any expert". You are a moron

  • @xxxGriffling1Dxxx
    @xxxGriffling1Dxxx Před 8 lety +3

    Talk about "you know nothing John Snow"

  • @awesoome
    @awesoome Před 8 lety +2

    I paused this video just to read the comments once i heard John Snow

  • @alesolano5507
    @alesolano5507 Před 5 lety +1

    Loved the ending. Inspiring

  • @ronsouther
    @ronsouther Před 3 lety +13

    Now update this video to show how terrain theory replaces germ theory!

    • @ronsouther
      @ronsouther Před 3 lety +1

      And Epigenetics is the next iteration of understanding of immunity.

    • @peterburton3095
      @peterburton3095 Před 2 lety

      @Bryan Hernandez Dr Tom Cowan, Dr Stefan Lanka & Dr Andrew Kaufman expose the germ THEORY fraud.

    • @ChrisG-qt7nv
      @ChrisG-qt7nv Před 2 lety +2

      @@peterburton3095 all those Dr's you named are ether cranks or frauds. Using credentials they have to push a false narrative for personal gain.

    • @sandtx4913
      @sandtx4913 Před 2 lety

      @Bryan Hernandez and you can get info on epigenetics by dr Bruce Lipton.

  • @danjsilve
    @danjsilve Před 2 lety +5

    I am for Terrain theory.

    • @oliverjudson1834
      @oliverjudson1834 Před 2 lety +1

      why

    • @danjsilve
      @danjsilve Před 2 lety

      @@oliverjudson1834 Have a look further down in the comments. It’s well covered..

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah Bechamp's theory can be destroyed in one sentence. The microzyma doesn't exist because it breaks the laws of thermodynamics. Boom terrain theory destroyed.

    • @danjsilve
      @danjsilve Před 2 lety

      @@sithwolf8017 To save me time, do you have links to sites detailing this? The problem as with all theories is that they are theories and not always conclusive. I have to check my own bias towards Terrain theory. Though I have had nothing but positive personal measurable results for myself. I fixed my asthma, without medication, which nearly killed me when I was 3.

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@danjsilve actually all you really need is basic highschool biology and some logic. Now bear with me this might get wordy. Bechamp claims that all microbes that we see in diseased tissue are not the cause but act as a clean up crew for the tissue. He then goes on to claim these microbes are all one species that originate from something he calls the microzyma. This means microbes from bacteria to multicellular parasites like tapeworms are all the exact same species. Now we get into the problems. According to genetics each organism on this planet has a unique code that we call DNA. To be considered part of the same species both organisms need to share 99% DNA with each other. That means the genes in a bacteria need to be found in a tapeworm or fungus. Yet if we run any gene sequencing experiments we see the tapeworm has far more DNA than a bacteria has. Where is that DNA coming from/going to? We also have no explanation for where the matter or stuff comes from. A tapeworm is 21 feet. A bacteria is a millimeter. Where's all that matter coming from? With no explanation for either thing we are lead to believe it just magically appeared or disappeared. This obviously breaks the laws of thermodynamics as matter/energy cannot be created nor destroyed. Ergo if the microzyma can't follow these simple laws then it doesn't exist therefore the core of Bechamp's theory is false.

  • @meditationgeek9014
    @meditationgeek9014 Před 3 lety +2

    Pasteur vs Béchamp

  • @LuchadorMasque
    @LuchadorMasque Před 3 lety

    We think we know SO much. For most of humanity's history there were massive colonies of tiny bug like creatures causing nearly all death and disease, and we had NO idea. We were CERTAIN it was from the balance of 4 fluids. So why be convinced we know how anything really works?
    #questioneverything

  • @jdelaguardia09
    @jdelaguardia09 Před 3 lety +19

    Now Germ Theory is being challenged by Terrain Theory.

    • @ladystardust2606
      @ladystardust2606 Před 2 lety +11

      As a nurse, I support the Terrain Theory. Vaccines and Pharmaceuticals are a massive industry. Personally, I never have vaccines. never get sick, eat clean, live clean, think clean

    • @sakola4
      @sakola4 Před 2 lety

      @@ladystardust2606 I agree with you but *beware of endocrine disruptors*

    • @1Waarheid
      @1Waarheid Před 2 lety +4

      Louis Pasteur was a fraud. On his deathbed he said the terrain theory ( Béchamp) was all! Pasteur was a man with a big ego. The germ theory is business.

    • @sakola4
      @sakola4 Před 2 lety +5

      @@1Waarheid Bernard was right: the pathogen is nothing, the terrain is everything.

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před 2 lety +2

      No it isn't. I've been challenging terrain theory and it's supporters and so far no one has answered my challenge successfully. Seriously 45 people failed. Besides this sham of a theory has no proof.

  • @tugglett5664
    @tugglett5664 Před 8 lety +2

    I'm watching this with a sore throat. Lol.

  • @KnakuanaRka
    @KnakuanaRka Před 5 lety +2

    I’d recommend Extra History’s episode on the Broad Street Pump; same information, but way more entertaining.

  • @Niko132
    @Niko132 Před 3 lety +3

    This video brought to you by....? The payed pharmaceutical industry, not one mention of Béchamp..

  • @shyama5612
    @shyama5612 Před 2 lety +3

    Pasteur was hardly a 'prolific scientist' - he was an average chemist who plagiarized and falsified results. Bechamp was the brilliant medical man and scientist and claude bernard too. Both were in the opposing camp that's not very profitable for the drug companies, so you never heard of them.

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před 2 lety +2

      Lol basic genetics completely destroys Bechamp and his asinine microzyma.

    • @shyama5612
      @shyama5612 Před 2 lety

      @@sithwolf8017 Ever heard of dark field microscopy?

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před rokem

      @@shyama5612 so any luck figuring out how dark field microscopy counters the fact that DNA destroys Bechamp's microzyma and terrain theory?

  • @ultimateasshole8754
    @ultimateasshole8754 Před 3 lety

    3:16
    Official: " *YOU KNOW NOTHING JOHN SNOW!* "

  • @jackieyo6128
    @jackieyo6128 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow talking about epidemology without talking about Girolamo Fracastoro or Wu Youke (they discovered it way before), so anglo-saxoncentric mate.

  • @hemlocktea6643
    @hemlocktea6643 Před 3 lety +5

    Kinda funny how
    You can buy a microscope and look at germs right now
    But there's people who believe they don't exist

    • @Casmige
      @Casmige Před 2 lety +2

      Biome en la terrain is everything.
      Not that they don’t exist just that they don’t cause dis-ease unless & until the terrain fosters an imbalance for such deluge, decimation, & demise.
      The same sun that softens butter? hardens clay.

    • @Zanderreaper
      @Zanderreaper Před 2 lety +1

      @@Casmige terrain theory isnt even medically proven

    • @sithwolf8017
      @sithwolf8017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Casmige terrain theory is nothing but lies and fails to answer a few simple questions I posed that can be answered using simple logic.

  • @SamA-xi8qj
    @SamA-xi8qj Před 5 lety +8

    I bet chemotherapy will be seen as extremely barbaric at some point in the hopefully near future.

    • @NikkyKnowsUNzs2001
      @NikkyKnowsUNzs2001 Před 4 lety +3

      It should be seen that way NOW!!!

    • @anotherpointofview222
      @anotherpointofview222 Před 4 lety +1

      Doesn't get any more barbaric than that. Get a jar of leeches why don't they?

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 3 lety

      @@NikkyKnowsUNzs2001 well, unfortunately we don’t have anything much better.

    • @NikkyKnowsUNzs2001
      @NikkyKnowsUNzs2001 Před 3 lety +1

      @@paulmahoney7619 Who brainwashed you to think like that?

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Před 3 lety

      @@NikkyKnowsUNzs2001 I would like to know where you’ve read of reliable cancer treatments better than chemo, radiation and surgery.

  • @pharaoh6824
    @pharaoh6824 Před 4 lety

    01:02 John Snow

  • @noah122804
    @noah122804 Před 2 lety +1

    Now Germ Theorist need to do the same thing with Terrain Theory, (as Myasma Theory did to Germ Theory)

  • @FullMetalPower7
    @FullMetalPower7 Před 8 lety +38

    eventually the existence of god will be disproved
    and people will be laughing at the various religions

    • @Skinnymarks
      @Skinnymarks Před 8 lety +3

      God can be used as a metaphore for certian structures of existance... it's possible that once we understand the nature of consciousness christians will call it god and atheists will say they were right all along. but both will be pointing at the exsact same thing.
      Theism is dying. the main reason is that the logic of their world view is eroding.
      hopefully theism will die down enough to not make a big splash when the public understands the nature of consciousness.

    • @ando4440
      @ando4440 Před 8 lety +13

      +FullMetalPower7 you can't disprove god,because you can't disprove a negative.It's like saying some day someone will disprove existence of fairies,unicorns,santa,etc.People just should understand how absurd it is to believe in such things.
      What can be disproved is specific religions(which we already did) like christianity or islam ,because we know there was no adam and eve,because we know about evolution.

    • @Fiiischinator
      @Fiiischinator Před 8 lety

      A lot of information the bible and other religious books have are disprooved for a long time now and almost anyone who is teached a religion after the early years of life, won't be able to take it seriously.
      But there will always be things that are not disproovable like the existence of a god so some people will always stick to a book that has tons of misinformation already.
      A propular way to deny that by religious people is by saying all those parts are not to be taken literally, but you could also say that to any part of the book that hasn't been proven wrong aswell. Maybe the entire bilble is supposed to be made up so people would listen to the 10 rules. But that they don't consider at all. "Only the disprooved parts are not to be taken literally."

    • @waltermitchel6266
      @waltermitchel6266 Před 8 lety +2

      +Fiiischinator you can't disprove the Quran

    • @hannibalvector1369
      @hannibalvector1369 Před 8 lety

      +abdelrahman galal True, but you CAN show where it contradicts itself, or is just flat out incorrect based on modern scientific understandings.

  • @Kyrani99
    @Kyrani99 Před 7 lety +3

    What the neglect to mention is that germs can be found in people who have no symptoms and suffer no disease from the pathogens. The reality I suspect is that if a person is stressed or whose body is for some reason not working at its optimum, will become affected by pathogens and suffer a disease. It is because their immune system is not working at its optimum.

    • @abuDA-bt6ei
      @abuDA-bt6ei Před rokem +1

      Bingo

    • @bwirth6649
      @bwirth6649 Před 11 měsíci

      It’s as if germ theory and terrain theory could both have truth…

  • @rakdok900
    @rakdok900 Před 6 lety +1

    I swear Louis Pasteur came up with Germ Theory

  • @smithy875
    @smithy875 Před 4 lety +1

    Why is it still a theory to this day !

    • @peterburton3095
      @peterburton3095 Před 3 lety

      Because germ theory has never been proven real. We've all been lied to to keep pharma making their trillions. Terrain theory is correct.

    • @baghiballsakh82
      @baghiballsakh82 Před 3 lety +1

      Terrain is still a theory to this day.

  • @Multicultural_Sheep
    @Multicultural_Sheep Před 10 měsíci +2

    I am now the 1000th comment :)

  • @jkk1253
    @jkk1253 Před 3 lety +3

    Bechamp was right

  • @ishachavan569
    @ishachavan569 Před 5 lety

    What about Louis pasteur

  • @alexanderphilip1809
    @alexanderphilip1809 Před 3 lety +1

    Amongst the Greatest contributions of Western Civilization.

  • @CB-gi3su
    @CB-gi3su Před 4 lety +5

    Germ theory is not based on science, it's based on Koch's and Pasteur's lies. Do some research, please.

    • @lemonlimelukey
      @lemonlimelukey Před 3 lety +3

      they dont like resesrch, especially when it flies in the face of those who fund them.

  • @MegaGrakus
    @MegaGrakus Před 8 lety +3

    you know nothing John Snow

  • @GameTagx
    @GameTagx Před 8 lety

    nice

  • @jonahsmith479
    @jonahsmith479 Před 8 lety +1

    Wait.....John Snow?

  • @MsKrisJb
    @MsKrisJb Před 2 lety +6

    Germ theory is a marketing campaign, nothing more

    • @Zanderreaper
      @Zanderreaper Před 2 lety +5

      Your spreading false info, germ theory is real

    • @tjellis1479
      @tjellis1479 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Zanderreaper Germ Theory is false spreading info

    • @Zanderreaper
      @Zanderreaper Před 2 lety +2

      @@tjellis1479 it's been proven more than many times you can even look under a microscope yourself. Why you not believe it's real?

    • @BB-ki7he
      @BB-ki7he Před 2 lety +2

      @@Zanderreaper Just because you can look at something under the microscope doesnt prove that thing you are looking at is causing disease.

    • @Zanderreaper
      @Zanderreaper Před 2 lety

      @@BB-ki7he but it can prove that they exist, and allow you to research them, germ theory has years and years of research and has been a medically proven fact. why do you not believe in it, its like saying "i don't believe in pregnancy". seriously why do you people not believe in already medically proven science.

  • @OGCrypto33
    @OGCrypto33 Před 2 lety +3

    Terrain theory is correct

  • @familiatrup
    @familiatrup Před 8 lety +1

    Nais!

  • @iMANTlS
    @iMANTlS Před 8 lety

    thank you
    people should know that theories could be wrong and misleading
    not resist without simplest proof !!
    those people cringe the wheel of science progression

    • @iMANTlS
      @iMANTlS Před 8 lety

      +iMANTlS evolution theory is wrong

  • @doctordk1948
    @doctordk1948 Před 2 lety +3

    PROPAGANDA!!!

    • @36shadowboy
      @36shadowboy Před 2 lety +1

      Dude...this was a semi academic talk from five years ago. It’s not propaganda just because you disagree