The Germ Theory of Disease is Not True
Source: Auto-Immune System Disorders
Definitions of Words are indicated with an asterisk *, and they are listed at the end of this article.
For well over a century, the
Western world has consistently upheld a belief-system (or mind-set) that
disease indiscriminately attacks humankind from outside of themselves, and that
they live their lives as apparent victims of invisible germs against which they
have little defense (except for the so-called magic of Western science and the
mystique that surrounds the commercialized medical/pharmaceutical technology).
This pervasive cultural
belief-system extends all the way back to the 17th century with the onset of a
Cartesian/Newtonian mechanical and reductionistic*
viewpoint of the human body, as well as humanity's overall relationship with
the universe. This reductionistic approach towards
investigating and understanding the physical organism and its relationship to
health and disease usually involves a further division of the body into as many
parts as possible. Each of these body parts are then analyzed separately (under
"medical specialization") in the belief that a greater comprehension
of the entire human anatomy will eventually occur. Many 19th and 20th century
beliefs can be traced back directly to these 17th century assumptions about
health and disease, such as:
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The human body is merely a biological machine.
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There is an "in here" inside the body and an "out there" outside the body that are separate and quite distinct from one another.
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Disease is a separate organism unto itself, or a foreign and hostile entity that is separate from a human being, and capable of entering and causing harm to a physical body.
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Illness is a calamity that strikes from outside of the body, and must be endured with the assistance of palliative* medications.
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Health is merely the absence of disease symptoms.
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As with disease, healing occurs independently of the mind, emotions and human consciousness.
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The level of health depends upon the quality of medicine.
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Health (or the healing process) occurs as a result of what someone (or something) does for us (or to us), rather than what we do for ourselves.
During the 1800's, Western
cultural science continued to perceive the human body as an accumulation of
various parts that existed as primarily separate from the mind, emotions and
spirit.
Along with this perception, Western civilization began to embrace a
mind-set that has gradually evolved into practically a religious belief;
namely, that Western science and its particular scientific method is a uniquely
objective, dispassionate and direct insight into truth and reality.
It is important to note that
"science" is not absolute, but merely a cultural form of knowingness,
and therefore is relative to a civilization's already existing cultural
beliefs.
A particular culture's science is merely a subjective,
deeply-conditioned cultural attitude toward the world in general, which has
gradually formed in the collective consciousness of that culture over an
extended period of time.
In reality, many cultural
sciences are vastly different (but equally valid) concepts of knowing and
experiencing reality. Although each of these sciences evolved from a different
cultural perception of reality, each of them are no less real (or unreal) than
our own, for we ultimately live what we know.
If we believe the universe and
ourselves to be mechanical and vulnerable to attack by micro-organisms, then
our belief-systems will cause us to live mechanically and provide overwhelming
power to these micro-organisms. According to Norman Cousins, the greatest force
in the human body is its natural drive to continually heal itself.
However,
this force is not independent of one's belief-system, which can translate
mental or emotional expectations into physiological change and outcome. For
example, note the ability of the fifteen billion neurons in the human brain to
convert our thoughts, hopes, ideas and attitudes into actual chemical substances
that ultimately create our own individual reality.
Unfortunately, Western
science still adheres to the belief that germs cause disease, and few of us
question this so-called "fact" of life. The infamous "germ
theory" as initially proposed by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch during the
late 1800's is over-simplified, inaccurate and tragically misleading when
applied to one's daily life experience.
Nevertheless, it continues to reign as
the cornerstone and foundation of our culture's common conceptual understanding
of the cause and cure of human disease.
The overwhelming rapidity
with which the germ theory of disease became accepted by the Western allopathic*
medical profession was a spectacular historical phenomenon. Even though the
current grouping of allopathic physicians no longer accept the belief that
germs are the sole cause of disease, there has been very little public
educational information to the contrary either promoted or sponsored by this
influential group of health authorities, as well as equally little informed or
insightful media coverage that would assist in further educating the lay
population to believe otherwise.
This is not meant to demean the persistent and
informed efforts of the allopathic general practitioners and family doctors who
spend the bulk of their professional careers imploring their patients to alter
their lifestyle habits in order to stop killing themselves with
self-destructive diets, drinking and smoking.
The historic
one-germ/one-disease theory that was initially proposed by Pasteur and Koch in
1881 basically postulated that each type of germ is solely responsible for
invading an unsuspecting individual and producing a specific type of ailment.
In their historic "Doctrine of Specificity", they indicated that "certain
microscopic entities, whose appearance in space and time correlates well with
other physical manifestations of illness, are causative of illness". This
Doctrine of Specificity was quickly refuted and disproven
by a number of his contemporaries, most notably Claude Bernard and I. M. Setchenov.
In spite of the published
research findings of Pasteur's and Koch's contemporaries that definitively
demonstrated the profound limitations in their overall conclusion, Pasteur's
initial theory was dynamically reinforced by the actions of the then current
university-trained allopathic physicians (at that time referred to as the
"regular" doctors).
These so-called regular doctors were desperately
seeking a nucleus around which to create some sort of "science" in
order to develop a form of prominent healing profession, thereby setting
themselves apart from the various other diverse systems of health care that
were co-existent at that time.
Historically speaking, this development
manifested at a time when the regular doctors' heroic use of bleeding, leeches,
and the administration of mercury and various other questionable chemical drugs
was literally killing their patients.
Therefore, the initial postulates of
Pasteur and his co-proponent Robert Koch unintentionally provided the
"regulars" with an eagerly-adopted scientific nucleus.
In 1882, little notice was
taken when Pasteur revised and re-stated his theory describing germs as a
secondary (rather than primary) cause of disease, with the body's
debilitated terrain being considered the initial cause.
The linear events and
politics of the misinterpretation and subsequent rise into prominence of his
initial theory of disease and the succeeding medical practices thereof
definitely illustrates how belief-systems based on certain assumptions (which
are marketed as a science, though not necessarily based on irrefutable
evidence) can affect and alter the collective consciousness of an entire
culture.
The unsung work of Pasteur's
fellow contemporary research scientists is far more revelant
and significant for the layperson of today. In rebuttal to Pasteur's doctrine
of specific etiology, they clearly demonstrated that:
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Disease micro-organisms seek out their own natural habitats; namely, diseased tissue.
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Germs vary their fermentative effect in conformity with the medium in which they find themselves.
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The host must be in a certain state of debility before germs can settle into bodily tissue or produce a state of disease.
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The disease process is largely dependent upon the terrain, or the underlying health of the body itself.
The scientific assumption
that infectious diseases are caused by the transmission of bacteria and viruses
has led to the widespread abuse of synthetic antibiotics. These products have
caused irreparable harm to the health of individuals in all the industrialized
nations throughout the world (and the United States in particular), even extending to delayed reactions
such as Candida albicans and a tremendous increase in allergies.
A senseless
urge to destroy these "enemy" micro-organisms is foremost even
nowadays in the minds of many patients and physicians alike, even though there
is more than sufficient awareness that it is not the presence (or lack thereof)
of these microbes, but rather the present state of our defense mechanisms that
ultimately determines the existence of infection.
In other words, it isn't the
causative agent that is the decisive factor, but rather the medium in which it
is allowed to flourish. We have at last come to realize that our health greatly
depends upon the reactive ability of our immune system.
Our cultural belief-system
needs to dispel its exaggerated and misleading fear of germs and replace this
conditioned response with a more positive attitude involving the proper
nourishment and maintenance of a spontaneously disease-resistant condition of
health and well-being.
Whether or not we ultimately succumb to the natural
activities of microbes depends much more on the ecological state of our
communities, our bodies and our diets than on the presence of bacteria and
viruses. We breathe in (and swallow) many thousands of microbes every hour
without any ill effects.
In fact, human beings in good health harbor many potentially pathogenic* microbes (such as diptheria, meningitis, Staphlococci
bacilli and the polio virus), and sometimes disease symptoms are present
without any specific "causative" germs. As Lewis Thomas clearly
points out in his work, The Lives of a Cell:
"Most bacteria are
totally preoccupied with browsing, altering the configurations of organic
molecules so that they become usable for the energy-needs of other forms of
life. In real life, even in our worst circumstances, we have always been a
relatively minor interest of the vast microbial world.
Pathogenicity
is not the rule. Indeed, it occurs so infrequently and involves such a
relatively small number of species, considering the huge population of bacteria
on the Earth, that it has a freakish aspect.
Disease usually results from
inconclusive negotiations for symbiosis, an overstepping of the line by one
side or the other, a biologic misinterpretation of borders."
If the body's underlying
health has been significantly lowered and the bodily tissues have been
adversely affected by micro-organisms, then the body will usually require assistance
in order to decrease the number of bacteria through the activation of a healing
crisis.
During this crisis (or healing response), an alteration in one's
nutritional patterns without the concurrent use of more concentrated medicinal
preparations will often be insufficient to effect total healing. On the other
hand, the timely usage of concentrated (herbal and vibrational)
medicine is appropriate and often necessary.
Various herbal products (such as
herbal teas, concentrated extracts or formulations, etc.) are active
nutritional medicines that strongly activate, vitalize and support the body's
own natural healing capabilities, with the most concentrated and effective
herbal agents being formulations of botanicals (crude plant extracts or
tablets), flower essences (signatures) and pure essential oils (aromatherapy).
After the healing crisis has subsided, a change in one's general nutritional
habits and lifestyle is essential in order to assist in rebuilding and
strengthening the body's terrain, as well as to enhance its immune system.
Germs are companion species
to all living beings on this planet, and are an essential and normal part of
our internal and external environment by assisting us in maintaining a balanced
and efficient biological economy.
When we allow our bodies to become saturated
with accumulations of morbid or metabolic waste material, These germs begin to proliferate* around this matter and create a dynamic
process in the body that is often referred to by non-medical practitioners as a
cleansing or "healing crisis".
This process is the end
result of every bodily system working in concert with one another in order to
eliminate, cleanse or purify, and regenerate any old, worn-out or diseased
tissues in the body.
This "feeling worse before feeling better"
syndrome is quite similar to that of a cleansing fast, with reactions that may
include skin eruptions or rashes, nausea, dizziness, pain, cramps, headaches,
stuffiness, sleepiness or unusual fatigue, diarrhea, boils, ear infections and
a head or chest cold, or any other forms of therapeutic symptoms that the body
may employ in order to loosen and eliminate toxins.
A normal healing crisis is
only temporary, and may last up to as many as three to seven days during the
initial cleanse. During this time, the body's requirement for cleansing fluids
(such as water, fruit juices or herbal teas) may increase significantly.
Healthy cells are extremely resistant to any microbial invasion or
proliferation until the bodily tissue develops a disease-condition (along with
weakened defense mechanisms), thereby allowing the infection to spread.
Unfortunately, we have come to associate microbes with various disorders that
manifest during these periods of proliferation, and we subsequently regard them
as causes rather than symptoms.
Definitions
reductionistic - the practice of simplifying a complex idea, issue,
condition, or the like, esp. to the point of minimizing, obscuring, or
distorting it.
palliative - to relieve or lessen without
curing.
allopathic -
the method of treating disease by the use of agents that produce effects
different from those of the disease treated (opposed to homeopathy), i.e.
current medical treatment.
pathogenic - capable of producing disease.
proliferate - to increase in number or spread
rapidly and often excessively.
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