Luis Pasteur, a professor of chemistry at the university of Lillie in Northern France, watched that sour wines contained barely visible rods and sticks, that could make people sick. In 1857 Pasteur wrote a note relating microbes to illness and set the foundation for the "Germ Theory of disease", against the theory of "Spontaneous Generation of Life" (meaning life originates from nothing and all by itself in the presence of air and food). The theme of the germ theory claims that there are some life forms that may grow/multiply in the presence of food and air, and these two elements are no way connected to the creation/origin of life what so ever.
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Experiment and
Postulation 1. Air carries Microbes. To make the broth germ free, two sets of container with the broth were heated up |
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Day 0 |
Day 1 |
Day 0 |
Day 1 |
When a sterile broth
left exposed to the air, life appeared in the broth |
Life forms did not appear in
the closed bottle with sterile broth Criticism: Heat destroyed the life ("Life-Force"). |
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Pasteur suggested that microbes entered
the flasks and broth was spoiled in the open flask. Criticism : His critics said that air brings the life ("Life-Force" to the bottle), therefore no air , no life. Hurdle to cross: Separate air and life. |
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Experiment and
Postulation 2. When the flasks were left open and the air was heated, no life appeared in the broth. |
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Criticism: Life ("Life-Force") in the air was destroyed by heat. |
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Grand Experiment: Swan Neck bottle solves the controversy, proving the Germ Theory |
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Comment: I found it amazing. I learned that thinking is the most important element in the science, and tool or gizmos will fall in place. I don't have to go the other planets to learn about myself. |