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Louis Pasteur

Louis Pasteur ForMemRS (/ˈli pæˈstɜːr/, French: [lwi pastœʁ]; 27 December 1822 – 28 September 1895) was a French chemist and microbiologist renowned for his discoveries of the principles of vaccination, microbial fermentation, and pasteurization, the last of which was named after him. His research in chemistry led to remarkable breakthroughs in the understanding of the causes and preventions of diseases, which laid down the foundations of hygiene, public health and much of modern medicine.[5] Pasteur's works are credited with saving millions of lives through the developments of vaccines for rabies and anthrax. He is regarded as one of the founders of modern bacteriology and has been honored as the "father of bacteriology"[6] and the "father of microbiology"[7][8] (together with Robert Koch;[9][10] the latter epithet also attributed to Antonie van Leeuwenhoek).[11]

Louis Pasteur

Photograph by Nadar
Born(1822-12-27)27 December 1822
Dole, France
Died28 September 1895(1895-09-28) (aged 72)
Education
Known forGerm theory of disease
Rabies vaccine
Cholera vaccine[4]
Anthrax vaccines
Pasteurization
Spouse
(m. 1849)
Children5
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Notable studentsCharles Friedel[3]
Signature

Pasteur was responsible for disproving the doctrine of spontaneous generation. Under the auspices of the French Academy of Sciences, his experiment demonstrated that in sterilized and sealed flasks, nothing ever developed; conversely, in sterilized but open flasks, microorganisms could grow.[12] For this experiment, the academy awarded him the Alhumbert Prize carrying 2,500 francs in 1862.

Pasteur is also regarded as one of the fathers of germ theory of diseases, which was a minor medical concept at the time.[13] His many experiments showed that diseases could be prevented by killing or stopping germs, thereby directly supporting the germ theory and its application in clinical medicine. He is best known to the general public for his invention of the technique of treating milk and wine to stop bacterial contamination, a process now called pasteurization. Pasteur also made significant discoveries in chemistry, most notably on the molecular basis for the asymmetry of certain crystals and racemization. Early in his career, his investigation of sodium ammonium tartrate initiated the field of optical isomerism. This work had a profound effect on structural chemistry, with eventual implications for many areas including medicinal chemistry.

He was the director of the Pasteur Institute, established in 1887, until his death, and his body was interred in a vault beneath the institute. Although Pasteur made groundbreaking experiments, his reputation became associated with various controversies. Historical reassessment of his notebook revealed that he practiced deception to overcome his rivals.[14][15]

Education and early life

 
 
Portraits of Pasteur's parents, painted by himself
 
The house in which Pasteur was born, Dole

Louis Pasteur was born on 27 December 1822, in Dole, Jura, France, to a Catholic family of a poor tanner.[16] He was the third child of Jean-Joseph Pasteur and Jeanne-Etiennette Roqui. The family moved to Marnoz in 1826 and then to Arbois in 1827.[17][18] Pasteur entered primary school in 1831.[19] He was dyslexic and dysgraphic.[20][21][22]

He was an average student in his early years, and not particularly academic, as his interests were fishing and sketching.[16] He drew many pastels and portraits of his parents, friends and neighbors.[23] Pasteur attended secondary school at the Collège d'Arbois.[24] In October 1838, he left for Paris to enroll in a boarding school, but became homesick and returned in November.[25]

In 1839, he entered the Collège Royal at Besançon to study philosophy and earned his Bachelor of Letters degree in 1840.[26] He was appointed a tutor at the Besançon college while continuing a degree science course with special mathematics.[27] He failed his first examination in 1841. He managed to pass the baccalauréat scientifique (general science) degree from Dijon, where he earned his Bachelor of Science in Mathematics degree (Bachelier ès Sciences Mathématiques) in 1842,[28] but with a mediocre grade in chemistry.[29]

Later in 1842, Pasteur took the entrance test for the École Normale Supérieure.[30] He passed the first set of tests, but because his ranking was low, Pasteur decided not to continue and try again next year.[31] He went back to the Parisian boarding school to prepare for the test. He also attended classes at the Lycée Saint-Louis and lectures of Jean-Baptiste Dumas at the Sorbonne.[32] In 1843, he passed the test with a high ranking and entered the École Normale Supérieure.[33] In 1845 he received the licencié ès sciences degree.[34] In 1846, he was appointed professor of physics at the Collège de Tournon (now called Lycée Gabriel-Faure) in Ardèche. But the chemist Antoine Jérôme Balard wanted him back at the École Normale Supérieure as a graduate laboratory assistant (agrégé préparateur).[35] He joined Balard and simultaneously started his research in crystallography and in 1847, he submitted his two theses, one in chemistry and the other in physics: (a) Chemistry Thesis: "Recherches sur la capacité de saturation de l'acide arsénieux. Etudes des arsénites de potasse, de soude et d'ammoniaque."; (b) Physics Thesis: "1. Études des phénomènes relatifs à la polarisation rotatoire des liquides. 2. Application de la polarisation rotatoire des liquides à la solution de diverses questions de chimie."[36][34][37]

After serving briefly as professor of physics at the Dijon Lycée in 1848, he became professor of chemistry at the University of Strasbourg,[38] where he met and courted Marie Laurent, daughter of the university's rector in 1849. They were married on 29 May 1849,[39] and together had five children, only two of whom survived to adulthood;[40] the other three died of typhoid.

Career

 
Louis Pasteur, French biologist and chemist, 1878, by A Gerschel

Pasteur was appointed professor of chemistry at the University of Strasbourg in 1848, and became the chair of chemistry in 1852.[41]

In February 1854, so that he would have time to carry out work that could earn him the title of correspondent of the Institute, he got three months' paid leave with the help of a medical certificate of convenience.[42] He extended the leave until 1 August, the date of the start of the exams. "I tell the Minister that I will go and do the examinations so as not to increase the embarrassment of the service. It is also so as not to leave to another a sum of 6 or 700 francs".[43]

In this same year 1854, he was named dean of the new faculty of sciences at University of Lille, where he began his studies on fermentation.[44] It was on this occasion that Pasteur uttered his oft-quoted remark: "dans les champs de l'observation, le hasard ne favorise que les esprits préparés" ("In the field of observation, chance favors only the prepared mind").[45]

In 1857, he moved to Paris as the director of scientific studies at the École Normale Supérieure where he took control from 1858 to 1867 and introduced a series of reforms to improve the standard of scientific work. The examinations became more rigid, which led to better results, greater competition, and increased prestige. Many of his decrees, however, were rigid and authoritarian, leading to two serious student revolts. During "the bean revolt" he decreed that a mutton stew, which students had refused to eat, would be served and eaten every Monday. On another occasion he threatened to expel any student caught smoking, and 73 of the 80 students in the school resigned.[46]

In 1863, he was appointed professor of geology, physics, and chemistry at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, a position he held until his resignation in 1867. In 1867, he became the chair of organic chemistry at the Sorbonne,[47] but he later gave up the position because of poor health.[48] In 1867, the École Normale's laboratory of physiological chemistry was created at Pasteur's request,[47] and he was the laboratory's director from 1867 to 1888.[49] In Paris, he established the Pasteur Institute in 1887, in which he was its director for the rest of his life.[7][50]

Research

Molecular asymmetry

 
Pasteur separated the left and right crystal shapes from each other to form two piles of crystals: in solution one form rotated light to the left, the other to the right, while an equal mixture of the two forms canceled each other's effect, and does not rotate the polarized light.

In Pasteur's early work as a chemist, beginning at the École Normale Supérieure, and continuing at Strasbourg and Lille, he examined the chemical, optical and crystallographic properties of a group of compounds known as tartrates.[51]

He resolved a problem concerning the nature of tartaric acid in 1848.[52][53][54][55] A solution of this compound derived from living things rotated the plane of polarization of light passing through it.[51] The problem was that tartaric acid derived by chemical synthesis had no such effect, even though its chemical reactions were identical and its elemental composition was the same.[56]

Pasteur noticed that crystals of tartrates had small faces. Then he observed that, in racemic mixtures of tartrates, half of the crystals were right-handed and half were left-handed. In solution, the right-handed compound was dextrorotatory, and the left-handed one was levorotatory.[51] Pasteur determined that optical activity related to the shape of the crystals, and that an asymmetric internal arrangement of the molecules of the compound was responsible for twisting the light.[44] The (2R,3R)- and (2S,3S)- tartrates were isometric, non-superposable mirror images of each other. This was the first time anyone had demonstrated molecular chirality, and also the first explanation of isomerism.[51]

Some historians consider Pasteur's work in this area to be his "most profound and most original contributions to science", and his "greatest scientific discovery."[51]

Fermentation and germ theory of diseases

Pasteur was motivated to investigate fermentation while working at Lille. In 1856 a local wine manufacturer, M. Bigot, whose son was one of Pasteur's students, sought for his advice on the problems of making beetroot alcohol and souring.[57][5] Pasteur began his research in the topic by repeating and confirming works of Theodor Schwann, who demonstrated a decade earlier that yeast were alive.

According to his son-in-law, René Vallery-Radot, in August 1857 Pasteur sent a paper about lactic acid fermentation to the Société des Sciences de Lille, but the paper was read three months later.[58] A memoire was subsequently published on 30 November 1857.[59] In the memoir, he developed his ideas stating that: "I intend to establish that, just as there is an alcoholic ferment, the yeast of beer, which is found everywhere that sugar is decomposed into alcohol and carbonic acid, so also there is a particular ferment, a lactic yeast, always present when sugar becomes lactic acid."[60]

Pasteur also wrote about alcoholic fermentation.[61] It was published in full form in 1858.[62][63] Jöns Jacob Berzelius and Justus von Liebig had proposed the theory that fermentation was caused by decomposition. Pasteur demonstrated that this theory was incorrect, and that yeast was responsible for fermentation to produce alcohol from sugar.[64] He also demonstrated that, when a different microorganism contaminated the wine, lactic acid was produced, making the wine sour.[5] In 1861, Pasteur observed that less sugar fermented per part of yeast when the yeast was exposed to air.[64] The lower rate of fermentation aerobically became known as the Pasteur effect.[65]

 
Pasteur experimenting in his laboratory
 
Institut Pasteur de Lille

Pasteur's research also showed that the growth of micro-organisms was responsible for spoiling beverages, such as beer, wine and milk. With this established, he invented a process in which liquids such as milk were heated to a temperature between 60 and 100 °C.[66] This killed most bacteria and moulds already present within them. Pasteur and Claude Bernard completed tests on blood and urine on 20 April 1862.[67] Pasteur patented the process, to fight the "diseases" of wine, in 1865.[66] The method became known as pasteurization, and was soon applied to beer and milk.[68]

Beverage contamination led Pasteur to the idea that micro-organisms infecting animals and humans cause disease. He proposed preventing the entry of micro-organisms into the human body, leading Joseph Lister to develop antiseptic methods in surgery.[69]

In 1866, Pasteur published Etudes sur le Vin, about the diseases of wine, and he published Etudes sur la Bière in 1876, concerning the diseases of beer.[64]

In the early 19th century, Agostino Bassi had shown that muscardine was caused by a fungus that infected silkworms.[70] Since 1853, two diseases called pébrine and flacherie had been infecting great numbers of silkworms in southern France, and by 1865 they were causing huge losses to farmers. In 1865, Pasteur went to Alès and worked for five years until 1870.[71][72]

Silkworms with pébrine were covered in corpuscles. In the first three years, Pasteur thought that the corpuscles were a symptom of the disease. In 1870, he concluded that the corpuscles were the cause of pébrine (it is now known that the cause is a microsporidian).[70] Pasteur also showed that the disease was hereditary.[73] Pasteur developed a system to prevent pébrine: after the female moths laid their eggs, the moths were turned into a pulp. The pulp was examined with a microscope, and if corpuscles were observed, the eggs were destroyed.[74][73] Pasteur concluded that bacteria caused flacherie. The primary cause is currently thought to be viruses.[70] The spread of flacherie could be accidental or hereditary. Hygiene could be used to prevent accidental flacherie. Moths whose digestive cavities did not contain the microorganisms causing flacherie were used to lay eggs, preventing hereditary flacherie.[75]

Spontaneous generation

 
Bottle en col de cygne (swan-neck bottle) used by Pasteur
 
Louis Pasteur's pasteurization experiment illustrates the fact that the spoilage of liquid was caused by particles in the air rather than the air itself. These experiments were important pieces of evidence supporting the germ theory of disease.

Following his fermentation experiments, Pasteur demonstrated that the skin of grapes was the natural source of yeasts, and that sterilized grapes and grape juice never fermented. He drew grape juice from under the skin with sterilized needles, and also covered grapes with sterilized cloth. Both experiments could not produce wine in sterilized containers.[5]

His findings and ideas were against the prevailing notion of spontaneous generation. He received a particularly stern criticism from Félix Archimède Pouchet, who was director of the Rouen Museum of Natural History. To settle the debate between the eminent scientists, the French Academy of Sciences offered the Alhumbert Prize carrying 2,500 francs to whoever could experimentally demonstrate for or against the doctrine.[76][77][78]

Pouchet stated that air everywhere could cause spontaneous generation of living organisms in liquids.[79] In the late 1850s, he performed experiments and claimed that they were evidence of spontaneous generation.[80][76] Francesco Redi and Lazzaro Spallanzani had provided some evidence against spontaneous generation in the 17th and 18th centuries, respectively. Spallanzani's experiments in 1765 suggested that air contaminated broths with bacteria. In the 1860s, Pasteur repeated Spallanzani's experiments, but Pouchet reported a different result using a different broth.[71]

Pasteur performed several experiments to disprove spontaneous generation. He placed boiled liquid in a flask and let hot air enter the flask. Then he closed the flask, and no organisms grew in it.[80] In another experiment, when he opened flasks containing boiled liquid, dust entered the flasks, causing organisms to grow in some of them. The number of flasks in which organisms grew was lower at higher altitudes, showing that air at high altitudes contained less dust and fewer organisms.[5][81] Pasteur also used swan neck flasks containing a fermentable liquid. Air was allowed to enter the flask via a long curving tube that made dust particles stick to it. Nothing grew in the broths unless the flasks were tilted, making the liquid touch the contaminated walls of the neck. This showed that the living organisms that grew in such broths came from outside, on dust, rather than spontaneously generating within the liquid or from the action of pure air.[5][82]

These were some of the most important experiments disproving the theory of spontaneous generation. Pasteur gave a series of five presentations of his findings before the French Academy of Sciences in 1881, which were published in 1882 as Mémoire Sur les corpuscules organisés qui existent dans l'atmosphère: Examen de la doctrine des générations spontanées (Account of Organized Corpuscles Existing in the Atmosphere: Examining the Doctrine of Spontaneous Generation).[83][84] Pasteur won the Alhumbert Prize in 1862.[80] He concluded that:

Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation recover from the mortal blow of this simple experiment. There is no known circumstance in which it can be confirmed that microscopic beings came into the world without germs, without parents similar to themselves.[5][72]

Silkworm disease

In 1865, Jean-Baptiste Dumas, chemist, senator and former Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, asked Pasteur to study a new disease that was decimating silkworm farms from the south of France and Europe, the pébrine, characterized on a macroscopic scale by black spots and on a microscopic scale by the "Cornalia corpuscles". Pasteur accepted and made five long stays in Alès, between 7 June 1865 and 1869.[85]

Initial errors

Arriving in Alès, Pasteur familiarized himself with pébrine and also[86] with another disease of the silkworm, known earlier[87] than pebrine: flacherie or dead-flat disease. Contrary, for example, to Quatrefages, who coined the new word pébrine,[88] Pasteur made the mistake of believing that the two diseases were the same and even that most of the diseases of silkworms known up to that time were identical with each other and with pébrine.[89] It was in letters of 30 April and 21 May 1867 to Dumas that he first made the distinction between pébrine and flacherie.[90]

He made another mistake: he began by denying the "parasitic" (microbial) nature of pébrine, which several scholars (notably Antoine Béchamp)[91] considered well established. Even a note published on 27 August 1866 by Balbiani,[92] which Pasteur at first seemed to welcome favourably[93] had no effect, at least immediately.[94] "Pasteur is mistaken. He would only change his mind in the course of 1867".[95]

Victory over pébrine

At a time where Pasteur had not yet understood the cause of the pébrine, he propagated an effective process to stop infections: a sample of chrysalises was chosen, they were crushed and the corpuscles were searched for in the crushed material; if the proportion of corpuscular pupae in the sample was very low, the chamber was considered good for reproduction.[96] This method of sorting "seeds" (eggs) is close to a method that Osimo had proposed a few years earlier, but whose trials had not been conclusive.[97] By this process, Pasteur curbs pébrine and saves many of the silk industry in the Cévennes.[98][99]

Flacherie resists

In 1878, at the Congrès international séricicole, Pasteur admitted that "if pébrine is overcome, flacherie still exerts its ravages". He attributed the persistence of flacherie to the fact that the farmers had not followed his advice.[100]

In 1884, Balbiani,[101] who disregarded the theoretical value of Pasteur's work on silkworm diseases, acknowledged that his practical process had remedied the ravages of pébrine, but added that this result tended to be counterbalanced by the development of flacherie, which was less well known and more difficult to prevent.

Despite Pasteur's success against pébrine, French sericulture had not been saved from damage. (See fr:Sériciculture in the French Wikipedia.)

Immunology and vaccination

Chicken cholera

Pasteur's first work on vaccine development was on chicken cholera. He received the bacteria samples (later called Pasteurella multocida after him) from Henry Toussaint.[102] He started the study in 1877, and by the next year, was able to maintain a stable culture using broths.[103] After another year of continuous culturing, he found that the bacteria were less pathogenic. Some of his culture samples could no longer induce the disease in healthy chickens. In 1879, Pasteur, planning for holiday, instructed his assistant, Charles Chamberland to inoculate the chickens with fresh bacteria culture. Chamberland forgot and went on holiday himself. On his return, he injected the month-old cultures to healthy chickens. The chickens showed some symptoms of infection, but instead of the infections being fatal, as they usually were, the chickens recovered completely. Chamberland assumed an error had been made, and wanted to discard the apparently faulty culture, but Pasteur stopped him.[104][105] Pasteur injected the freshly recovered chickens with fresh bacteria that normally would kill other chickens; the chickens no longer showed any sign of infection. It was clear to him that the weakened bacteria had caused the chickens to become immune to the disease.[103][106]

In December 1880, Pasteur presented his results to the French Academy of Sciences as "Sur les maladies virulentes et en particulier sur la maladie appelée vulgairement choléra des poules (On virulent diseases, and in particular on the disease commonly called chicken cholera)" and published it in the academy's journal (Comptes-Rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des Sciences). He attributed that the bacteria were weakened by contact with oxygen.[102] He explained that bacteria kept in sealed containers never lost their virulence, and only those exposed to air in culture media could be used as vaccine. Pasteur introduced the term "attenuation" for this weakening of virulence as he presented before the academy, saying:

We can diminish the microbe's virulence by changing the mode of culturing. This is the crucial point of my subject. I ask the Academy not to criticize, for the time being, the confidence of my proceedings that permit me to determine the microbe's attenuation, in order to save the independence of my studies and to better assure their progress... [In conclusion] I would like to point out to the Academy two main consequences to the facts presented: the hope to culture all microbes and to find a vaccine for all infectious diseases that have repeatedly afflicted humanity, and are a major burden on agriculture and breeding of domestic animals.[107]

In fact, Pasteur's vaccine against chicken cholera was not regular in its effects and was a failure.[108]

Anthrax

In the 1870s, he applied this immunization method to anthrax, which affected cattle, and aroused interest in combating other diseases. Pasteur cultivated bacteria from the blood of animals infected with anthrax. When he inoculated animals with the bacteria, anthrax occurred, proving that the bacteria was the cause of the disease.[109] Many cattle were dying of anthrax in "cursed fields".[72] Pasteur was told that sheep that died from anthrax were buried in the field. Pasteur thought that earthworms might have brought the bacteria to the surface. He found anthrax bacteria in earthworms' excrement, showing that he was correct.[72] He told the farmers not to bury dead animals in the fields.[110] Pasteur had been trying to develop the anthrax vaccine since 1877, soon after Robert Koch's discovery of the bacterium.[107]

 
Louis Pasteur in his laboratory, painting by A. Edelfeldt in 1885

On 12 July 1880, Henri Bouley read before the French Academy of Sciences a report from Henry Toussaint, a veterinary surgeon, who was not member of the academy. Toussaint had developed anthrax vaccine by killing the bacilli by heating at 55 °C for 10  minutes. He tested on eight dogs and 11 sheep, half of which died after inoculation. It was not a great success. Upon hearing the news, Pasteur immediately wrote to the academy that he could not believe that dead vaccine would work and that Toussaint's claim "overturns all the ideas I had on viruses, vaccines, etc."[107] Following Pasteur's criticism, Toussaint switched to carbolic acid to kill anthrax bacilli and tested the vaccine on sheep in August 1880. Pasteur thought that this type of killed vaccine should not work because he believed that attenuated bacteria used up nutrients that the bacteria needed to grow. He thought oxidizing bacteria made them less virulent.[111]

But Pasteur found that anthrax bacillus was not easily weakened by culturing in air as it formed spores – unlike chicken cholera bacillus. In early 1881, he discovered that growing anthrax bacilli at about 42 °C made them unable to produce spores,[112] and he described this method in a speech to the French Academy of Sciences on 28 February.[113] On 21 March, he announced successful vaccination of sheep. To this news, veterinarian Hippolyte Rossignol proposed that the Société d'agriculture de Melun organize an experiment to test Pasteur's vaccine. Pasteur signed agreement of the challenge on 28 April. A public experiment was conducted in May at Pouilly-le-Fort. 58 sheep, 2 goats and 10 cattle were used, half of which were given the vaccine on 5 and 17 May; while the other half was untreated.[114] All the animals were injected with the fresh virulent culture of anthrax bacillus on 31 May. The official result was observed and analysed on 2 June in the presence of over 200 spectators. All cattle survived, vaccinated or not. Pasteur had bravely predicted: "I hypothesized that the six vaccinated cows would not become very ill, while the four unvaccinated cows would perish or at least become very ill."[114] However, all vaccinated sheep and goats survived, while unvaccinated ones had died or were dying before the viewers.[115] His report to the French Academy of Sciences on 13 June concludes:

[By] looking at everything from the scientific point of view, the development of a vaccination against anthrax constitutes significant progress beyond the first vaccine developed by Jenner, since the latter had never been obtained experimentally.[114]

Pasteur did not directly disclose how he prepared the vaccines used at Pouilly-le-Fort.[116][112] Although his report indicated it as a "live vaccine",[114] his laboratory notebooks show that he actually used potassium dichromate-killed vaccine, as developed by Chamberland, quite similar to Toussaint's method.[117][56][118]

The notion of a weak form of a disease causing immunity to the virulent version was not new; this had been known for a long time for smallpox. Inoculation with smallpox (variolation) was known to result in a much less severe disease, and greatly reduced mortality, in comparison with the naturally acquired disease.[119] Edward Jenner had also studied vaccination using cowpox (vaccinia) to give cross-immunity to smallpox in the late 1790s, and by the early 1800s vaccination had spread to most of Europe.[120]

The difference between smallpox vaccination and anthrax or chicken cholera vaccination was that the latter two disease organisms had been artificially weakened, so a naturally weak form of the disease organism did not need to be found.[117] This discovery revolutionized work in infectious diseases, and Pasteur gave these artificially weakened diseases the generic name of "vaccines", in honour of Jenner's discovery.[121]

In 1876, Robert Koch had shown that Bacillus anthracis caused anthrax.[122] In his papers published between 1878 and 1880, Pasteur only mentioned Koch's work in a footnote. Koch met Pasteur at the Seventh International Medical Congress in 1881. A few months later, Koch wrote that Pasteur had used impure cultures and made errors. In 1882, Pasteur replied to Koch in a speech, to which Koch responded aggressively.[13] Koch stated that Pasteur tested his vaccine on unsuitable animals and that Pasteur's research was not properly scientific.[5] In 1882, Koch wrote "On the Anthrax Inoculation", in which he refuted several of Pasteur's conclusions about anthrax and criticized Pasteur for keeping his methods secret, jumping to conclusions, and being imprecise. In 1883, Pasteur wrote that he used cultures prepared in a similar way to his successful fermentation experiments and that Koch misinterpreted statistics and ignored Pasteur's work on silkworms.[122]

Swine erysipelas

In 1882, Pasteur sent his assistant Louis Thuillier to southern France because of an epizootic of swine erysipelas.[123] Thuillier identified the bacillus that caused the disease in March 1883.[71] Pasteur and Thuillier increased the bacillus's virulence after passing it through pigeons. Then they passed the bacillus through rabbits, weakening it and obtaining a vaccine. Pasteur and Thuillier incorrectly described the bacterium as a figure-eight shape. Roux described the bacterium as stick-shaped in 1884.[124]

Rabies

 
Captioned "Hydrophobia", caricature of Pasteur in the London magazine Vanity Fair, January 1887

Pasteur produced the first vaccine for rabies by growing the virus in rabbits, and then weakening it by drying the affected nerve tissue.[72][125] The rabies vaccine was initially created by Emile Roux, a French doctor and a colleague of Pasteur, who had produced a killed vaccine using this method.[5] The vaccine had been tested in 50 dogs before its first human trial.[126][127] This vaccine was used on 9-year-old Joseph Meister, on 6 July 1885, after the boy was badly mauled by a rabid dog.[56][125] This was done at some personal risk for Pasteur, since he was not a licensed physician and could have faced prosecution for treating the boy.[50] After consulting with physicians, he decided to go ahead with the treatment.[128] Over 11 days, Meister received 13 inoculations, each inoculation using viruses that had been weakened for a shorter period of time.[129] Three months later he examined Meister and found that he was in good health.[128][130] Pasteur was hailed as a hero and the legal matter was not pursued.[50] Analysis of his laboratory notebooks shows that Pasteur had treated two people before his vaccination of Meister. One survived but may not actually have had rabies, and the other died of rabies.[129][131] Pasteur began treatment of Jean-Baptiste Jupille on 20 October 1885, and the treatment was successful.[129] Later in 1885, people, including four children from the United States, went to Pasteur's laboratory to be inoculated.[128] In 1886, he treated 350 people, of which only one developed rabies.[129] The treatment's success laid the foundations for the manufacture of many other vaccines. The first of the Pasteur Institutes was also built on the basis of this achievement.[56]

In The Story of San Michele, Axel Munthe writes of some risks Pasteur undertook in the rabies vaccine research:[132]

Pasteur himself was absolutely fearless. Anxious to secure a sample of saliva straight from the jaws of a rabid dog, I once saw him with the glass tube held between his lips draw a few drops of the deadly saliva from the mouth of a rabid bull-dog, held on the table by two assistants, their hands protected by leather gloves.

Because of his study in germs, Pasteur encouraged doctors to sanitize their hands and equipment before surgery. Prior to this, few doctors or their assistants practiced these procedures.[133][134] Ignaz Semmelweis and Joseph Lister had earlier practiced hand sanitizing in medical contexts in the 1860s.[135][136]

Controversies

A French national hero at age 55, in 1878 Pasteur discreetly told his family to never reveal his laboratory notebooks to anyone. His family obeyed, and all his documents were held and inherited in secrecy. Finally, in 1964 Pasteur's grandson and last surviving male descendant, Pasteur Vallery-Radot, donated the papers to the French national library. Yet the papers were restricted for historical studies until the death of Vallery-Radot in 1971. The documents were given a catalogue number only in 1985.[137]

In 1995, the centennial of the death of Louis Pasteur, a historian of science Gerald L. Geison published an analysis of Pasteur's private notebooks in his The Private Science of Louis Pasteur, and declared that Pasteur had given several misleading accounts and played deceptions in his most important discoveries.[14][138] Max Perutz published a defense of Pasteur in The New York Review of Books.[139] Based on further examinations of Pasteur's documents, French immunologist Patrice Debré concluded in his book Louis Pasteur (1998) that, in spite of his genius, Pasteur had some faults. A book review states that Debré "sometimes finds him unfair, combative, arrogant, unattractive in attitude, inflexible and even dogmatic".[140][141]

Fermentation

Scientists before Pasteur had studied fermentation. In the 1830s, Charles Cagniard-Latour, Friedrich Traugott Kützing and Theodor Schwann used microscopes to study yeasts and concluded that yeasts were living organisms. In 1839, Justus von Liebig, Friedrich Wöhler and Jöns Jacob Berzelius stated that yeast was not an organism and was produced when air acted on plant juice.[64]

In 1855, Antoine Béchamp, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Montpellier, conducted experiments with sucrose solutions and concluded that water was the factor for fermentation.[142] He changed his conclusion in 1858, stating that fermentation was directly related to the growth of moulds, which required air for growth. He regarded himself as the first to show the role of microorganisms in fermentation.[143][60]

Pasteur started his experiments in 1857 and published his findings in 1858 (April issue of Comptes Rendus Chimie, Béchamp's paper appeared in January issue). Béchamp noted that Pasteur did not bring any novel idea or experiments. On the other hand, Béchamp was probably aware of Pasteur's 1857 preliminary works. With both scientists claiming priority on the discovery, a dispute, extending to several areas, lasted throughout their lives.[144][145]

However, Béchamp was on the losing side, as the BMJ obituary remarked: His name was "associated with bygone controversies as to priority which it would be unprofitable to recall".[146] Béchamp proposed the incorrect theory of microzymes. According to K. L. Manchester, anti-vivisectionists and proponents of alternative medicine promoted Béchamp and microzymes, unjustifiably claiming that Pasteur plagiarized Béchamp.[60]

Pasteur thought that succinic acid inverted sucrose. In 1860, Marcellin Berthelot isolated invertase and showed that succinic acid did not invert sucrose.[64] Pasteur believed that fermentation was only due to living cells. He and Berthelot engaged in a long argument subject of vitalism, in which Berthelot was vehemently opposed to any idea of vitalism.[147] Hans Buchner discovered that zymase (not an enzyme, but a mixture of enzymes) catalyzed fermentation, showing that fermentation was catalyzed by enzymes within cells.[148] Eduard Buchner also discovered that fermentation could take place outside living cells.[149]

Anthrax vaccine

Pasteur publicly claimed his success in developing the anthrax vaccine in 1881.[130] However, his admirer-turned-rival Henry Toussaint was the one who developed the first vaccine. Toussaint isolated the bacteria that caused chicken cholera (later named Pasteurella in honour of Pasteur) in 1879 and gave samples to Pasteur who used them for his own works.[150] On 12 July 1880, Toussaint presented his successful result to the French Academy of Sciences, using an attenuated vaccine against anthrax in dogs and sheep.[151] Pasteur on grounds of jealousy contested the discovery by publicly displaying his vaccination method at Pouilly-le-Fort on 5 May 1881.[152] Pasteur then gave a misleading account of the preparation of the anthrax vaccine used in the experiment. He claimed that he made a "live vaccine", but used potassium dichromate[14] to inactivate anthrax spores, a method similar to Toussaint's. The promotional experiment was a success and helped Pasteur sell his products, getting the benefits and glory.[152][153][154][155]

Experimental ethics

Pasteur's experiments are often cited as against medical ethics, especially on his vaccination of Meister. He did not have any experience in medical practice, and more importantly, lacked a medical license. This is often cited as a serious threat to his professional and personal reputation.[156][157] His closest partner Émile Roux, who had medical qualifications, refused to participate in the clinical trial, likely because he considered it unjust.[129] However, Pasteur executed vaccination of the boy under the close watch of practising physicians Jacques-Joseph Grancher, head of the Paris Children's Hospital's paediatric clinic, and Alfred Vulpian, a member of the Commission on Rabies. He was not allowed to hold the syringe, although the inoculations were entirely under his supervision.[128] It was Grancher who was responsible for the injections, and he defended Pasteur before the French National Academy of Medicine in the issue.[158]

Pasteur has also been criticized for keeping secrecy of his procedure and not giving proper pre-clinical trials on animals.[5] Pasteur stated that he kept his procedure secret in order to control its quality. He later disclosed his procedures to a small group of scientists. Pasteur wrote that he had successfully vaccinated 50 rabid dogs before using it on Meister.[159][160][161] According to Geison, Pasteur's laboratory notebooks show that he had vaccinated only 11 dogs.[5]

Meister never showed any symptoms of rabies,[129] but the vaccination has not been proved to be the reason. One source estimates the probability of Meister contracting rabies at 10%.[117]

Awards and honours

Pasteur was awarded 1,500 francs in 1853 by the Pharmaceutical Society for the synthesis of racemic acid.[162] In 1856 the Royal Society of London presented him the Rumford Medal for his discovery of the nature of racemic acid and its relations to polarized light,[163] and the Copley Medal in 1874 for his work on fermentation.[164] He was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 1869.[1]

The French Academy of Sciences awarded Pasteur the 1859 Montyon Prize for experimental physiology in 1860,[47] and the Jecker Prize in 1861 and the Alhumbert Prize in 1862 for his experimental refutation of spontaneous generation.[80][165] Though he lost elections in 1857 and 1861 for membership to the French Academy of Sciences, he won the 1862 election for membership to the mineralogy section.[166] He was elected to permanent secretary of the physical science section of the academy in 1887 and held the position until 1889.[167]

In 1873, Pasteur was elected to the Académie Nationale de Médecine[168] and was made the commander in the Brazilian Order of the Rose.[169] In 1881 he was elected to a seat at the Académie française left vacant by Émile Littré.[170] Pasteur received the Albert Medal from the Royal Society of Arts in 1882.[171] In 1883 he became foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.[172] In 1885, he was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society.[173] On 8 June 1886, the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II awarded Pasteur with the Order of the Medjidie (I Class) and 10000 Ottoman liras.[174] He was awarded the Cameron Prize for Therapeutics of the University of Edinburgh in 1889.[175] Pasteur won the Leeuwenhoek Medal from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences for his contributions to microbiology in 1895.[176]

Pasteur was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1853, promoted to Officer in 1863, to Commander in 1868, to Grand Officer in 1878 and made a Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor in 1881.[177][171]

 
Pasteur Street (Đường Pasteur) in Da Nang, Vietnam

Legacy

 
Vulitsya Pastera or Pasteur Street in Odesa, Ukraine

In many localities worldwide, streets are named in his honor. For example, in the US: Palo Alto and Irvine, California, Boston and Polk, Florida, adjacent to the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio; Jonquière, Québec; San Salvador de Jujuy and Buenos Aires (Argentina), Great Yarmouth in Norfolk, in the United Kingdom, Jericho and Wulguru in Queensland, Australia; Phnom Penh in Cambodia; Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang, Vietnam; Batna in Algeria; Bandung in Indonesia, Tehran in Iran, near the central campus of the Warsaw University in Warsaw, Poland; adjacent to the Odesa State Medical University in Odesa, Ukraine; Milan in Italy and Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca and Timișoara in Romania. The Avenue Pasteur in Saigon, Vietnam, is one of the few streets in that city to retain its French name. Avenue Louis Pasteur in the Longwood Medical and Academic Area in Boston was named in his honor in the French manner with "Avenue" preceding the name of the dedicatee.[178]

Both the Institut Pasteur and Université Louis Pasteur were named after Pasteur. The schools Lycée Pasteur in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, and Lycée Louis Pasteur in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, are named after him. In South Africa, the Louis Pasteur Private Hospital in Pretoria, and Life Louis Pasteur Private Hospital, Bloemfontein, are named after him. Louis Pasteur University Hospital in Košice, Slovakia is also named after Pasteur.

 
Louis Pasteur University Hospital, Košice, Slovakia

A statue of Pasteur is erected at San Rafael High School in San Rafael, California. A bronze bust of him resides on the French Campus of Kaiser Permanente's San Francisco Medical Center in San Francisco. The sculpture was designed by Harriet G. Moore and cast in 1984 by Artworks Foundry.[179]

The UNESCO/Institut Pasteur Medal was created on the centenary of Pasteur's death, and is given every two years in his name, "in recognition of outstanding research contributing to a beneficial impact on human health".[180]

The French Academician Henri Mondor stated: "Louis Pasteur was neither a physician nor a surgeon, but no one has done as much for medicine and surgery as he has."[181]

Pasteur Institute

After developing the rabies vaccine, Pasteur proposed an institute for the vaccine.[182] In 1887, fundraising for the Pasteur Institute began, with donations from many countries. The official statute was registered in 1887, stating that the institute's purposes were "the treatment of rabies according to the method developed by M. Pasteur" and "the study of virulent and contagious diseases".[128] The institute was inaugurated on 14 November 1888.[128] He brought together scientists with various specialties. The first five departments were directed by two graduates of the École Normale Supérieure: Émile Duclaux (general microbiology research) and Charles Chamberland (microbe research applied to hygiene), as well as a biologist, Élie Metchnikoff (morphological microbe research) and two physicians, Jacques-Joseph Grancher (rabies) and Émile Roux (technical microbe research). One year after the inauguration of the institute, Roux set up the first course of microbiology ever taught in the world, then entitled Cours de Microbie Technique (Course of microbe research techniques). Since 1891 the Pasteur Institute had been extended to different countries, and currently there are 32 institutes in 29 countries in various parts of the world.[183]

Personal life

 
Pasteur in 1857

Pasteur married Marie Pasteur (née Laurent) in 1849. She was the daughter of the rector of the University of Strasbourg, and was Pasteur's scientific assistant. They had five children together, three of whom died as children.[184] Their eldest daughter, Jeanne, was born in 1850. She died from typhoid fever, aged 9, whilst at the boarding school Arbois in 1859. In 1865, 2-year-old Camille died of a liver tumour. Shortly after they decided to bring Cécile home from boarding school, but she too died of typhoid fever on 23 May 1866 at the age of 12. Only Jean Baptiste (b. 1851) and Marie Louise (b. 1858) survived to adulthood. Jean Baptiste would be a soldier in the Franco-Prussian War between France and Prussia.[185]

Faith and spirituality

His grandson, Louis Pasteur Vallery-Radot, wrote that Pasteur had kept from his Catholic background only a spiritualism without religious practice.[186] However, Catholic observers often said that Pasteur remained an ardent Christian throughout his whole life, and his son-in-law wrote, in a biography of him:

Absolute faith in God and in Eternity, and a conviction that the power for good given to us in this world will be continued beyond it, were feelings which pervaded his whole life; the virtues of the gospel had ever been present to him. Full of respect for the form of religion which had been that of his forefathers, he came simply to it and naturally for spiritual help in these last weeks of his life.[187]

The Literary Digest of 18 October 1902 gives this statement from Pasteur that he prayed while he worked:

Posterity will one day laugh at the foolishness of modern materialistic philosophers. The more I study nature, the more I stand amazed at the work of the Creator. I pray while I am engaged at my work in the laboratory.

Maurice Vallery-Radot, grandson of the brother of the son-in-law of Pasteur and outspoken Catholic, also holds that Pasteur fundamentally remained Catholic.[188] According to both Pasteur Vallery-Radot and Maurice Vallery-Radot, the following well-known quotation attributed to Pasteur is apocryphal:[189] "The more I know, the more nearly is my faith that of the Breton peasant. Could I but know all I would have the faith of a Breton peasant's wife".[16] According to Maurice Vallery-Radot,[190] the false quotation appeared for the first time shortly after the death of Pasteur.[191] However, despite his belief in God, it has been said that his views were that of a freethinker rather than a Catholic, a spiritual more than a religious man.[192][193] He was also against mixing science with religion.[194][195]

Death

In 1868, Pasteur suffered a severe brain stroke that paralysed the left side of his body, but he recovered.[196] A stroke or uremia in 1894 severely impaired his health.[197][198][199] Failing to fully recover, he died on 28 September 1895, near Paris.[56] He was given a state funeral and was buried in the Cathedral of Notre Dame, but his remains were reinterred in the Pasteur Institute in Paris,[200] in a vault covered in depictions of his accomplishments in Byzantine mosaics.[201]

Publications

Pasteur's principal published works are:[16]

French Title Year English Title
Etudes sur le Vin 1866 Studies on Wine
Etudes sur le Vinaigre 1868 Studies on Vinegar
Etudes sur la Maladie des Vers à Soie (2 volumes) 1870 Studies on Silk Worm Disease
Quelques Réflexions sur la Science en France 1871 Some Reflections on Science in France
Etudes sur la Bière 1876 Studies on Beer
Les Microbes organisés, leur rôle dans la Fermentation, la Putréfaction et la Contagion 1878 Microbes organized, their role in fermentation, putrefaction and the Contagion
Discours de Réception de M.L. Pasteur à l'Académie française 1882 Speech by Mr L. Pasteur on reception to the Académie française
Traitement de la Rage 1886 Treatment of Rabies

See also

References

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  84. ^ Carter, K. C. (1991). "The development of Pasteur's concept of disease causation and the emergence of specific causes in nineteenth-century medicine". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 65 (4): 528–548. JSTOR 44442642. PMID 1802317. from the original on 25 January 2022. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  85. ^ Jimmy Drulhon, Louis Pasteur. Five years in the Cévennes, Ed. Hermann, 2009. Pasteur stayed and carried out his scientific work at the magnanerie of Pont Gisquet, on the road to Saint-Jean-du-Pin.See Google Street. 7 April 2022 at the Wayback Machine
  86. ^ "He had known it [= flacherie] for a long time, since his first stay in the South in 1865, where one of the two farms that had served as a starting point departure to his deductions was affected by this disease, at the same time as that of the corpuscles." Émile Duclaux, Pasteur, Histoire d'un esprit, pp. 218–219, available on Gallica 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  87. ^ "This denomination of white-dead, used by the Abbé de Sauvages and several other writers, is inaccurate; this is why I thought it necessary to add that of dead-flats, vulgarly used in several departments, and which designates very well the state of softness and flaccidity in which the worms dead of this disease are found. " Pierre Hubert Nysten, Research on the diseases of silkworms, Paris, 1808, p. 5, available on Google Books.
  88. ^ See account of Quatrefages reproduced in L. Pasteur, Études sur la maladie des vers à soie, Paris, 1870, Complete Works of Pasteur, t. 4, p. 27, online 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  89. ^ "But the cases of association were so frequent, precisely because the disease of the corpuscles was so widespread, that Pasteur had thought that the two conditions were linked to each other and should disappear together. " (Émile Duclaux, Pasteur, Histoire d'un esprit, pp. 218–219, online 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine.) Pasteur expressed this opinion, in particular in " Nouvelles études sur la maladie des vers à soie ", Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences, t. 63 (1866), pp. 126–142: "I am very much inclined to believe that there is no actual actual disease of silkworms. The disease complained of seems to me to have always existed, but to a lesser degree. (...) Furthermore, I have serious grounds for believing that most of the diseases of the silkworm which have been known for a long time are linked to the one which occupies us, muscardine and, perhaps, grasserie excepted. (p. 136). Available at Gallica 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Same thing in a letter of June 27, 1866, to Dumas: "all the other so-called ancient diseases of the silkworm, minus the muscardine and perhaps the grasserie, such as the disease of motrs -flats, petits, passis, arpians, are only forms of the actual disease. " (Pasteur, Correspondance, t. 2, p. 265. Quoted by Ph. Decourt, Les vérités indésirables, Paris, 1989, p. 173, and by P. Pinet, Pasteur et la phiolosophie, Paris, 2004, p. 158.
  90. ^ "Sur la maladie des vers à soie. Lettre de M. L. Pasteur à M. Dumas", Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences, meeting of 3 June 1867, t. 64, p. 1113. Available at Gallica 7 April 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  91. ^ Philippe Decourt, Les vérités indésirables, Paris, 1989, pp. 165–193, accuses Pasteur of a denial of justice towards Antoine Béchamp, who studied pebrine at the same time as Pasteur and immediately affirmed the parasitic nature of the disease.
  92. ^ Balbiani, Balbiani, " Recherches sur les corpuscules de la pébrine et sur leur mode de propagation ", Comptes rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, session of 27 August 1866, vol. 63 (1866), pp. 388–391, available at Gallica 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Balbiani begins in this manner: "Among all the contradictory opinions which have been expressed on the nature of the corpuscles of the pébrine, the most debatable, in my opinion, is that which consists in assimilating them to anatomical elements either normal, or more or less altered., or to morbid products such as pus globules, etc. This opinion was refuted more than eight years ago by Professor Lebert (...); but I believe I can also bring, against the way of seeing cited above, more decisive proofs, based on the observation of the phenomena which these corpuscles present in their evolution, phenomena which put beyond doubt their close relationship with the parasitic organisms. known under the name of Psorospermia".
  93. ^ "As for the opinions expressed by Mr. Balbiani on the nature of the corpuscles, although I do not share them, I will take great care to examine them, for two reasons: because they are from a skilful observer, and because I still only have preconceived views on the objects they concern, to which I do not agree more than reason. There is more: I earnestly hope that the ideas of MM. Balbiani and Leydig are true (...)". Pasteur, "Observations au sujet d'une Note de M. Balbiani relative à la maladie des vers à soie", Comptes rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, meeting of 10 September 1866, vol. 63 (1866), pp. 441–443.
  94. ^ On 29 May 1867, Pasteur wrote to Dumas again: "Despite all that I would have to say about the notes of Béchamp, Estor, Balbiani and on the articles that the first two insert in the Messager du Midi, I take your advice, I do not answer. If you knew how erroneous it is to say that this disease is not constitutional and only parasitic. Its essential character is precisely its constitutional character. " (Quoted by Ph. Decourt, Les vérités indésirables, Paris, 1989, p. 190.)
  95. ^ P. Debré, Louis Pasteur, Flammarion, 1994, p. 219. In his Études sur la maladie des vers à soie (Studies on silkworm disease), published in 1870 (Pasteur's Complete Works, vol. 4, available at Gallica 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine), Pasteur reports that he consulted Leydig on the question of the living nature of corpuscles. (One of his letters to Leydig is from December 1866.) He admits that "in substance" he adopted the opinions of Leydig and Balbiani, but he contradicts them on the question of the mode of formation of the corpuscles (pp. 135, 137 and 138). In 1884, Balbiani will examine Pasteur's theory on the development of corpuscles and will conclude as follows: "I believe that it is useless to dwell any longer on the observations of M. Pasteur, which I think I can characterize with a single word by saying that their author proves in it how little he is familiar with the researches of biology. But with this reservation, I do justice to his work, which has rendered sericulture farmers a real service by enabling them to recognize a healthy seed from a diseased seed. " (G. Balbiani, Leçons sus les sporozoaires, Paris, 1884, pp. 160–163, online.) On Pasteur's errors in the study of silkworms and his own judgment on these errors, see Richard Moreau, "Le dernier pli cacheté de Louis Pasteur à l'Académie des sciences", La vie des sciences, Comptes rendus, série générale, t. 6, 1989, n° 5, pp. 403–434, online 30 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  96. ^ Louis Pasteur, Études sur la maladie des vers à soie; Œuvres complètes, t. 4, pp. 166–167, available at Gallica 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  97. ^ Pasteur mentions Osimo's ideas in Louis Pasteur, Études sur la maladie des vers à soie, Œuvres complètes, t. 4, pp. 38–39, available at Gallica 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Summarizing a development by Émile Duclaux (Émile Duclaux, Pasteur, histoire d'un esprit, Sceaux, 1896, p. 198, available at /bpt6k764468/f203.notice Gallica 6 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine), P. Debré wrote that Pasteur was "led to propose a seed sorting method almost identical to that recommended a few years earlier by Orcino [read: Osimo]. If the latter had failed, asserts Pasteur, it was through a lack of confidence; which, of course, is not his case. " P. Debré, Louis Pasteur, Flammarion, 1994, p. 210.
  98. ^ Patrice Debré, Louis Pasteur, Flammarion, 1995, p. 246.
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  101. ^ G. Balbiani, Leçons sus les sporozoaires, Paris, 1884, pp. 160–163, 167–168, online.
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  191. ^ In Pasteur's Semaine religieuse ... du diocèse de Versailles, 6 October 1895, p. 153.
  192. ^ Joseph McCabe (1945). A Biographical Dictionary of Ancient, Medieval, and Modern Freethinkers. Haldeman-Julius Publications. from the original on 13 January 2013. Retrieved 11 August 2012. The anonymous Catholic author quotes as his authority the standard biography by Vallery-Radot, yet this describes Pasteur as a freethinker; and this is confirmed in the preface to the English translation by Sir W. Osler, who knew Pasteur personally. Vallery-Radot was himself a Catholic yet admits that Pasteur believed only in "an Infinite" and "hoped" for a future life. Pasteur publicly stated this himself in his Academy speech in 1822 (in V.R.). He said: "The idea of God is a form of the idea of the Infinite whether it is called Brahma, Allah, Jehova, or Jesus." The biographer says that in his last days he turned to the Church but the only "evidence" he gives is that he liked to read the life of St. Vincent de Paul, and he admits that he did not receive the sacraments at death. Relatives put rosary beads in his hands, and the Catholic Encyclopedia claims him as a Catholic in virtue of the fact and of an anonymous and inconclusive statement about him. Wheeler says in his Dictionary of Freethinkers that in his prime Pasteur was Vice-President of the British Secular (Atheist) Union; and Wheeler was the chief Secularist writer of the time. The evidence is overwhelming. Yet the Catholic scientist Sir Bertram Windle assures his readers that "no person who knows anything about him can doubt the sincerity of his attachment to the Catholic Church," and all Catholic writers use much the same scandalous language.
  193. ^ Patrice Debré (2000). Louis Pasteur. JHU Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-8018-6529-9. Does this mean that Pasteur was bound to a religious ideal? His attitude was that of a believer, not of a sectarian. One of his most brilliant disciples, Elie Metchnikoff, was to attest that he spoke of religion only in general terms. In fact, Pasteur evaded the question by claiming quite simply that religion has no more place in science than science has in religion. ... A biologist more than a chemist, a spiritual more than a religious man, Pasteur was held back only by the lack of more powerful technical means and therefore had to limit himself to identifying germs and explaining their generation.
  194. ^ Debré, Patrice (2000). Louis Pasteur. Translated by Forster, Elborg. JHU Press. p. 368. ISBN 978-0-8018-6529-9. Pasteur advocated separation of science and religion: "In each one of us there are two men, the scientist and the man of faith or of doubt. These two spheres are separate, and woe to those who want to make them encroach upon one another in the present state of our knowledge!"
  195. ^ Patrice Debré (2000). Louis Pasteur. JHU Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-8018-6529-9.
  196. ^ Vallery-Radot, René (1919). The Life of Pasteur. Translated by Devonshire, R. L. London: Constable & Company. pp. 159–168.
  197. ^ Debré, Patrice (2000). Louis Pasteur. Translated by Forster, Elborg. Baltimore: JHU Press. p. 512. ISBN 978-0-8018-6529-9.
  198. ^ Keim, Albert; Lumet, Louis (1914). Louis Pasteur. Frederick A. Stokes Company. p. 206.
  199. ^ Vallery-Radot, René (1919). The Life of Pasteur. Translated by Devonshire, R. L. London: Constable & Company. p. 458.
  200. ^ Frankland, Percy (1901). Pasteur. Cassell and Company. pp. 217–219.
  201. ^ Campbell, D M (January 1915). "The Pasteur Institute of Paris". American Journal of Veterinary Medicine. 10 (1): 29–31. Retrieved 8 February 2010.
  202. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Pasteur.

Further reading

  • Benz, Francis E. (1938). Pasteur, Knight of the Laboratory. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company. from the original on 12 February 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  • Debré, P.; E. Forster (1998). Louis Pasteur. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-5808-6.
  • Duclaux, E.Translated by Erwin F. Smith and Florence Hedges (1920). Louis Pasteur: The History of a Mind. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company. ASIN B001RV90WA.
  • Geison, Gerald L. (1995). The Private Science of Louis Pasteur. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-03442-3.
  • Cédric Grimoult, Pasteur: Le mythe au coeur de l'action (ou le combattant), Paris, Ellipses, coll. "Biographies et mythes historiques", 2021, 332 p.
  • de Kruif, Paul (1926). Microbe Hunters. Blue Ribbon Books. New York: Harcourt Brace & Company Inc. Retrieved 9 October 2020., chapters III (PASTEUR: Microbes are a Menace!) and V (PASTEUR: And the Mad Dog)
  • Latour, Bruno (1988). The Pasteurization of France. Boston: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-65761-8.
  • Reynolds, Moira Davison. How Pasteur Changed History: The Story of Louis Pasteur and the Pasteur Institute (1994)
  • Williams, Roger L. (1957). Gaslight and Shadow: The World of Napoleon III, 1851–1870. New York: Macmillan Company. ISBN 978-0-8371-9821-7.

External links

  • The Institut Pasteur – Foundation dedicated to the prevention and treatment of diseases through biological research, education and public health activities
  • The Pasteur Foundation – A US nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the mission of the Institut Pasteur in Paris. Full archive of newsletters available online containing examples of US Tributes to Louis Pasteur.
  • Pasteur's Papers on the Germ Theory
  • The Life and Work of Louis Pasteur, Pasteur Brewing
  • The Pasteur Galaxy
  • Germ Theory and Its Applications to Medicine and Surgery, 1878
  • Louis Pasteur (1822–1895) profile, AccessExcellence.org
  • Works by or about Louis Pasteur at Internet Archive
  • Works by Louis Pasteur at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Newspaper clippings about Louis Pasteur in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Pasteur Œuvre tome 1 – Dissymétrie moléculaire (in French). 1922–1939.
  • Pasteur Œuvre tome 2 – Fermentations et générations dites spontanées (in French). 1922–1939.
  • Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences 11 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Articles published by Pasteur (in French)

louis, pasteur, pasteur, redirects, here, other, uses, pasteur, disambiguation, formemrs, ɜːr, french, pastœʁ, december, 1822, september, 1895, french, chemist, microbiologist, renowned, discoveries, principles, vaccination, microbial, fermentation, pasteuriza. Pasteur redirects here For other uses see Pasteur disambiguation Louis Pasteur ForMemRS ˈ l uː i p ae ˈ s t ɜːr French lwi pastœʁ 27 December 1822 28 September 1895 was a French chemist and microbiologist renowned for his discoveries of the principles of vaccination microbial fermentation and pasteurization the last of which was named after him His research in chemistry led to remarkable breakthroughs in the understanding of the causes and preventions of diseases which laid down the foundations of hygiene public health and much of modern medicine 5 Pasteur s works are credited with saving millions of lives through the developments of vaccines for rabies and anthrax He is regarded as one of the founders of modern bacteriology and has been honored as the father of bacteriology 6 and the father of microbiology 7 8 together with Robert Koch 9 10 the latter epithet also attributed to Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 11 Louis PasteurFRSPhotograph by NadarBorn 1822 12 27 27 December 1822Dole FranceDied28 September 1895 1895 09 28 aged 72 Marnes la Coquette FranceEducationEcole normale superieureUniversity of ParisKnown forGerm theory of diseaseRabies vaccineCholera vaccine 4 Anthrax vaccinesPasteurizationSpouseMarie Laurent m 1849 wbr Children5AwardsLegion of Honor Grand Cross 1881 Rumford Medal 1856 Foreign Member of the Royal Society 1869 1 Copley Medal 1874 Albert Medal 1882 Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Sciences 1883 Cameron Prize for Therapeutics of the University of Edinburgh 1889 Leeuwenhoek Medal 1895 Order of the Medjidie 2 Scientific careerFieldsBiology Microbiology Chemistry Mathematics PhysicsInstitutionsUniversity of Strasbourg University of Lille Ecole Normale Superieure Pasteur InstituteNotable studentsCharles Friedel 3 SignaturePasteur was responsible for disproving the doctrine of spontaneous generation Under the auspices of the French Academy of Sciences his experiment demonstrated that in sterilized and sealed flasks nothing ever developed conversely in sterilized but open flasks microorganisms could grow 12 For this experiment the academy awarded him the Alhumbert Prize carrying 2 500 francs in 1862 Pasteur is also regarded as one of the fathers of germ theory of diseases which was a minor medical concept at the time 13 His many experiments showed that diseases could be prevented by killing or stopping germs thereby directly supporting the germ theory and its application in clinical medicine He is best known to the general public for his invention of the technique of treating milk and wine to stop bacterial contamination a process now called pasteurization Pasteur also made significant discoveries in chemistry most notably on the molecular basis for the asymmetry of certain crystals and racemization Early in his career his investigation of sodium ammonium tartrate initiated the field of optical isomerism This work had a profound effect on structural chemistry with eventual implications for many areas including medicinal chemistry He was the director of the Pasteur Institute established in 1887 until his death and his body was interred in a vault beneath the institute Although Pasteur made groundbreaking experiments his reputation became associated with various controversies Historical reassessment of his notebook revealed that he practiced deception to overcome his rivals 14 15 Contents 1 Education and early life 2 Career 3 Research 3 1 Molecular asymmetry 3 2 Fermentation and germ theory of diseases 3 3 Spontaneous generation 3 4 Silkworm disease 3 4 1 Initial errors 3 4 2 Victory over pebrine 3 4 3 Flacherie resists 3 5 Immunology and vaccination 3 5 1 Chicken cholera 3 5 2 Anthrax 3 5 3 Swine erysipelas 3 5 4 Rabies 4 Controversies 4 1 Fermentation 4 2 Anthrax vaccine 4 3 Experimental ethics 5 Awards and honours 5 1 Legacy 5 2 Pasteur Institute 6 Personal life 6 1 Faith and spirituality 6 2 Death 7 Publications 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEducation and early life nbsp nbsp Portraits of Pasteur s parents painted by himself nbsp The house in which Pasteur was born DoleLouis Pasteur was born on 27 December 1822 in Dole Jura France to a Catholic family of a poor tanner 16 He was the third child of Jean Joseph Pasteur and Jeanne Etiennette Roqui The family moved to Marnoz in 1826 and then to Arbois in 1827 17 18 Pasteur entered primary school in 1831 19 He was dyslexic and dysgraphic 20 21 22 He was an average student in his early years and not particularly academic as his interests were fishing and sketching 16 He drew many pastels and portraits of his parents friends and neighbors 23 Pasteur attended secondary school at the College d Arbois 24 In October 1838 he left for Paris to enroll in a boarding school but became homesick and returned in November 25 In 1839 he entered the College Royal at Besancon to study philosophy and earned his Bachelor of Letters degree in 1840 26 He was appointed a tutor at the Besancon college while continuing a degree science course with special mathematics 27 He failed his first examination in 1841 He managed to pass the baccalaureat scientifique general science degree from Dijon where he earned his Bachelor of Science in Mathematics degree Bachelier es Sciences Mathematiques in 1842 28 but with a mediocre grade in chemistry 29 Later in 1842 Pasteur took the entrance test for the Ecole Normale Superieure 30 He passed the first set of tests but because his ranking was low Pasteur decided not to continue and try again next year 31 He went back to the Parisian boarding school to prepare for the test He also attended classes at the Lycee Saint Louis and lectures of Jean Baptiste Dumas at the Sorbonne 32 In 1843 he passed the test with a high ranking and entered the Ecole Normale Superieure 33 In 1845 he received the licencie es sciences degree 34 In 1846 he was appointed professor of physics at the College de Tournon now called Lycee Gabriel Faure in Ardeche But the chemist Antoine Jerome Balard wanted him back at the Ecole Normale Superieure as a graduate laboratory assistant agrege preparateur 35 He joined Balard and simultaneously started his research in crystallography and in 1847 he submitted his two theses one in chemistry and the other in physics a Chemistry Thesis Recherches sur la capacite de saturation de l acide arsenieux Etudes des arsenites de potasse de soude et d ammoniaque b Physics Thesis 1 Etudes des phenomenes relatifs a la polarisation rotatoire des liquides 2 Application de la polarisation rotatoire des liquides a la solution de diverses questions de chimie 36 34 37 After serving briefly as professor of physics at the Dijon Lycee in 1848 he became professor of chemistry at the University of Strasbourg 38 where he met and courted Marie Laurent daughter of the university s rector in 1849 They were married on 29 May 1849 39 and together had five children only two of whom survived to adulthood 40 the other three died of typhoid Career nbsp Louis Pasteur French biologist and chemist 1878 by A GerschelPasteur was appointed professor of chemistry at the University of Strasbourg in 1848 and became the chair of chemistry in 1852 41 In February 1854 so that he would have time to carry out work that could earn him the title of correspondent of the Institute he got three months paid leave with the help of a medical certificate of convenience 42 He extended the leave until 1 August the date of the start of the exams I tell the Minister that I will go and do the examinations so as not to increase the embarrassment of the service It is also so as not to leave to another a sum of 6 or 700 francs 43 In this same year 1854 he was named dean of the new faculty of sciences at University of Lille where he began his studies on fermentation 44 It was on this occasion that Pasteur uttered his oft quoted remark dans les champs de l observation le hasard ne favorise que les esprits prepares In the field of observation chance favors only the prepared mind 45 In 1857 he moved to Paris as the director of scientific studies at the Ecole Normale Superieure where he took control from 1858 to 1867 and introduced a series of reforms to improve the standard of scientific work The examinations became more rigid which led to better results greater competition and increased prestige Many of his decrees however were rigid and authoritarian leading to two serious student revolts During the bean revolt he decreed that a mutton stew which students had refused to eat would be served and eaten every Monday On another occasion he threatened to expel any student caught smoking and 73 of the 80 students in the school resigned 46 In 1863 he was appointed professor of geology physics and chemistry at the Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux Arts a position he held until his resignation in 1867 In 1867 he became the chair of organic chemistry at the Sorbonne 47 but he later gave up the position because of poor health 48 In 1867 the Ecole Normale s laboratory of physiological chemistry was created at Pasteur s request 47 and he was the laboratory s director from 1867 to 1888 49 In Paris he established the Pasteur Institute in 1887 in which he was its director for the rest of his life 7 50 ResearchMolecular asymmetry nbsp Pasteur separated the left and right crystal shapes from each other to form two piles of crystals in solution one form rotated light to the left the other to the right while an equal mixture of the two forms canceled each other s effect and does not rotate the polarized light In Pasteur s early work as a chemist beginning at the Ecole Normale Superieure and continuing at Strasbourg and Lille he examined the chemical optical and crystallographic properties of a group of compounds known as tartrates 51 He resolved a problem concerning the nature of tartaric acid in 1848 52 53 54 55 A solution of this compound derived from living things rotated the plane of polarization of light passing through it 51 The problem was that tartaric acid derived by chemical synthesis had no such effect even though its chemical reactions were identical and its elemental composition was the same 56 Pasteur noticed that crystals of tartrates had small faces Then he observed that in racemic mixtures of tartrates half of the crystals were right handed and half were left handed In solution the right handed compound was dextrorotatory and the left handed one was levorotatory 51 Pasteur determined that optical activity related to the shape of the crystals and that an asymmetric internal arrangement of the molecules of the compound was responsible for twisting the light 44 The 2R 3R and 2S 3S tartrates were isometric non superposable mirror images of each other This was the first time anyone had demonstrated molecular chirality and also the first explanation of isomerism 51 Some historians consider Pasteur s work in this area to be his most profound and most original contributions to science and his greatest scientific discovery 51 Fermentation and germ theory of diseases Pasteur was motivated to investigate fermentation while working at Lille In 1856 a local wine manufacturer M Bigot whose son was one of Pasteur s students sought for his advice on the problems of making beetroot alcohol and souring 57 5 Pasteur began his research in the topic by repeating and confirming works of Theodor Schwann who demonstrated a decade earlier that yeast were alive According to his son in law Rene Vallery Radot in August 1857 Pasteur sent a paper about lactic acid fermentation to the Societe des Sciences de Lille but the paper was read three months later 58 A memoire was subsequently published on 30 November 1857 59 In the memoir he developed his ideas stating that I intend to establish that just as there is an alcoholic ferment the yeast of beer which is found everywhere that sugar is decomposed into alcohol and carbonic acid so also there is a particular ferment a lactic yeast always present when sugar becomes lactic acid 60 Pasteur also wrote about alcoholic fermentation 61 It was published in full form in 1858 62 63 Jons Jacob Berzelius and Justus von Liebig had proposed the theory that fermentation was caused by decomposition Pasteur demonstrated that this theory was incorrect and that yeast was responsible for fermentation to produce alcohol from sugar 64 He also demonstrated that when a different microorganism contaminated the wine lactic acid was produced making the wine sour 5 In 1861 Pasteur observed that less sugar fermented per part of yeast when the yeast was exposed to air 64 The lower rate of fermentation aerobically became known as the Pasteur effect 65 nbsp Pasteur experimenting in his laboratory nbsp Institut Pasteur de LillePasteur s research also showed that the growth of micro organisms was responsible for spoiling beverages such as beer wine and milk With this established he invented a process in which liquids such as milk were heated to a temperature between 60 and 100 C 66 This killed most bacteria and moulds already present within them Pasteur and Claude Bernard completed tests on blood and urine on 20 April 1862 67 Pasteur patented the process to fight the diseases of wine in 1865 66 The method became known as pasteurization and was soon applied to beer and milk 68 Beverage contamination led Pasteur to the idea that micro organisms infecting animals and humans cause disease He proposed preventing the entry of micro organisms into the human body leading Joseph Lister to develop antiseptic methods in surgery 69 In 1866 Pasteur published Etudes sur le Vin about the diseases of wine and he published Etudes sur la Biere in 1876 concerning the diseases of beer 64 In the early 19th century Agostino Bassi had shown that muscardine was caused by a fungus that infected silkworms 70 Since 1853 two diseases called pebrine and flacherie had been infecting great numbers of silkworms in southern France and by 1865 they were causing huge losses to farmers In 1865 Pasteur went to Ales and worked for five years until 1870 71 72 Silkworms with pebrine were covered in corpuscles In the first three years Pasteur thought that the corpuscles were a symptom of the disease In 1870 he concluded that the corpuscles were the cause of pebrine it is now known that the cause is a microsporidian 70 Pasteur also showed that the disease was hereditary 73 Pasteur developed a system to prevent pebrine after the female moths laid their eggs the moths were turned into a pulp The pulp was examined with a microscope and if corpuscles were observed the eggs were destroyed 74 73 Pasteur concluded that bacteria caused flacherie The primary cause is currently thought to be viruses 70 The spread of flacherie could be accidental or hereditary Hygiene could be used to prevent accidental flacherie Moths whose digestive cavities did not contain the microorganisms causing flacherie were used to lay eggs preventing hereditary flacherie 75 Spontaneous generation nbsp Bottle en col de cygne swan neck bottle used by Pasteur nbsp Louis Pasteur s pasteurization experiment illustrates the fact that the spoilage of liquid was caused by particles in the air rather than the air itself These experiments were important pieces of evidence supporting the germ theory of disease Following his fermentation experiments Pasteur demonstrated that the skin of grapes was the natural source of yeasts and that sterilized grapes and grape juice never fermented He drew grape juice from under the skin with sterilized needles and also covered grapes with sterilized cloth Both experiments could not produce wine in sterilized containers 5 His findings and ideas were against the prevailing notion of spontaneous generation He received a particularly stern criticism from Felix Archimede Pouchet who was director of the Rouen Museum of Natural History To settle the debate between the eminent scientists the French Academy of Sciences offered the Alhumbert Prize carrying 2 500 francs to whoever could experimentally demonstrate for or against the doctrine 76 77 78 Pouchet stated that air everywhere could cause spontaneous generation of living organisms in liquids 79 In the late 1850s he performed experiments and claimed that they were evidence of spontaneous generation 80 76 Francesco Redi and Lazzaro Spallanzani had provided some evidence against spontaneous generation in the 17th and 18th centuries respectively Spallanzani s experiments in 1765 suggested that air contaminated broths with bacteria In the 1860s Pasteur repeated Spallanzani s experiments but Pouchet reported a different result using a different broth 71 Pasteur performed several experiments to disprove spontaneous generation He placed boiled liquid in a flask and let hot air enter the flask Then he closed the flask and no organisms grew in it 80 In another experiment when he opened flasks containing boiled liquid dust entered the flasks causing organisms to grow in some of them The number of flasks in which organisms grew was lower at higher altitudes showing that air at high altitudes contained less dust and fewer organisms 5 81 Pasteur also used swan neck flasks containing a fermentable liquid Air was allowed to enter the flask via a long curving tube that made dust particles stick to it Nothing grew in the broths unless the flasks were tilted making the liquid touch the contaminated walls of the neck This showed that the living organisms that grew in such broths came from outside on dust rather than spontaneously generating within the liquid or from the action of pure air 5 82 These were some of the most important experiments disproving the theory of spontaneous generation Pasteur gave a series of five presentations of his findings before the French Academy of Sciences in 1881 which were published in 1882 as Memoire Sur les corpuscules organises qui existent dans l atmosphere Examen de la doctrine des generations spontanees Account of Organized Corpuscles Existing in the Atmosphere Examining the Doctrine of Spontaneous Generation 83 84 Pasteur won the Alhumbert Prize in 1862 80 He concluded that Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation recover from the mortal blow of this simple experiment There is no known circumstance in which it can be confirmed that microscopic beings came into the world without germs without parents similar to themselves 5 72 Silkworm disease In 1865 Jean Baptiste Dumas chemist senator and former Minister of Agriculture and Commerce asked Pasteur to study a new disease that was decimating silkworm farms from the south of France and Europe the pebrine characterized on a macroscopic scale by black spots and on a microscopic scale by the Cornalia corpuscles Pasteur accepted and made five long stays in Ales between 7 June 1865 and 1869 85 Initial errors Arriving in Ales Pasteur familiarized himself with pebrine and also 86 with another disease of the silkworm known earlier 87 than pebrine flacherie or dead flat disease Contrary for example to Quatrefages who coined the new word pebrine 88 Pasteur made the mistake of believing that the two diseases were the same and even that most of the diseases of silkworms known up to that time were identical with each other and with pebrine 89 It was in letters of 30 April and 21 May 1867 to Dumas that he first made the distinction between pebrine and flacherie 90 He made another mistake he began by denying the parasitic microbial nature of pebrine which several scholars notably Antoine Bechamp 91 considered well established Even a note published on 27 August 1866 by Balbiani 92 which Pasteur at first seemed to welcome favourably 93 had no effect at least immediately 94 Pasteur is mistaken He would only change his mind in the course of 1867 95 Victory over pebrine At a time where Pasteur had not yet understood the cause of the pebrine he propagated an effective process to stop infections a sample of chrysalises was chosen they were crushed and the corpuscles were searched for in the crushed material if the proportion of corpuscular pupae in the sample was very low the chamber was considered good for reproduction 96 This method of sorting seeds eggs is close to a method that Osimo had proposed a few years earlier but whose trials had not been conclusive 97 By this process Pasteur curbs pebrine and saves many of the silk industry in the Cevennes 98 99 Flacherie resists In 1878 at the Congres international sericicole Pasteur admitted that if pebrine is overcome flacherie still exerts its ravages He attributed the persistence of flacherie to the fact that the farmers had not followed his advice 100 In 1884 Balbiani 101 who disregarded the theoretical value of Pasteur s work on silkworm diseases acknowledged that his practical process had remedied the ravages of pebrine but added that this result tended to be counterbalanced by the development of flacherie which was less well known and more difficult to prevent Despite Pasteur s success against pebrine French sericulture had not been saved from damage See fr Sericiculture in the French Wikipedia Immunology and vaccination Chicken cholera Pasteur s first work on vaccine development was on chicken cholera He received the bacteria samples later called Pasteurella multocida after him from Henry Toussaint 102 He started the study in 1877 and by the next year was able to maintain a stable culture using broths 103 After another year of continuous culturing he found that the bacteria were less pathogenic Some of his culture samples could no longer induce the disease in healthy chickens In 1879 Pasteur planning for holiday instructed his assistant Charles Chamberland to inoculate the chickens with fresh bacteria culture Chamberland forgot and went on holiday himself On his return he injected the month old cultures to healthy chickens The chickens showed some symptoms of infection but instead of the infections being fatal as they usually were the chickens recovered completely Chamberland assumed an error had been made and wanted to discard the apparently faulty culture but Pasteur stopped him 104 105 Pasteur injected the freshly recovered chickens with fresh bacteria that normally would kill other chickens the chickens no longer showed any sign of infection It was clear to him that the weakened bacteria had caused the chickens to become immune to the disease 103 106 In December 1880 Pasteur presented his results to the French Academy of Sciences as Sur les maladies virulentes et en particulier sur la maladie appelee vulgairement cholera des poules On virulent diseases and in particular on the disease commonly called chicken cholera and published it in the academy s journal Comptes Rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l Academie des Sciences He attributed that the bacteria were weakened by contact with oxygen 102 He explained that bacteria kept in sealed containers never lost their virulence and only those exposed to air in culture media could be used as vaccine Pasteur introduced the term attenuation for this weakening of virulence as he presented before the academy saying We can diminish the microbe s virulence by changing the mode of culturing This is the crucial point of my subject I ask the Academy not to criticize for the time being the confidence of my proceedings that permit me to determine the microbe s attenuation in order to save the independence of my studies and to better assure their progress In conclusion I would like to point out to the Academy two main consequences to the facts presented the hope to culture all microbes and to find a vaccine for all infectious diseases that have repeatedly afflicted humanity and are a major burden on agriculture and breeding of domestic animals 107 In fact Pasteur s vaccine against chicken cholera was not regular in its effects and was a failure 108 Anthrax In the 1870s he applied this immunization method to anthrax which affected cattle and aroused interest in combating other diseases Pasteur cultivated bacteria from the blood of animals infected with anthrax When he inoculated animals with the bacteria anthrax occurred proving that the bacteria was the cause of the disease 109 Many cattle were dying of anthrax in cursed fields 72 Pasteur was told that sheep that died from anthrax were buried in the field Pasteur thought that earthworms might have brought the bacteria to the surface He found anthrax bacteria in earthworms excrement showing that he was correct 72 He told the farmers not to bury dead animals in the fields 110 Pasteur had been trying to develop the anthrax vaccine since 1877 soon after Robert Koch s discovery of the bacterium 107 nbsp Louis Pasteur in his laboratory painting by A Edelfeldt in 1885On 12 July 1880 Henri Bouley read before the French Academy of Sciences a report from Henry Toussaint a veterinary surgeon who was not member of the academy Toussaint had developed anthrax vaccine by killing the bacilli by heating at 55 C for 10 minutes He tested on eight dogs and 11 sheep half of which died after inoculation It was not a great success Upon hearing the news Pasteur immediately wrote to the academy that he could not believe that dead vaccine would work and that Toussaint s claim overturns all the ideas I had on viruses vaccines etc 107 Following Pasteur s criticism Toussaint switched to carbolic acid to kill anthrax bacilli and tested the vaccine on sheep in August 1880 Pasteur thought that this type of killed vaccine should not work because he believed that attenuated bacteria used up nutrients that the bacteria needed to grow He thought oxidizing bacteria made them less virulent 111 But Pasteur found that anthrax bacillus was not easily weakened by culturing in air as it formed spores unlike chicken cholera bacillus In early 1881 he discovered that growing anthrax bacilli at about 42 C made them unable to produce spores 112 and he described this method in a speech to the French Academy of Sciences on 28 February 113 On 21 March he announced successful vaccination of sheep To this news veterinarian Hippolyte Rossignol proposed that the Societe d agriculture de Melun organize an experiment to test Pasteur s vaccine Pasteur signed agreement of the challenge on 28 April A public experiment was conducted in May at Pouilly le Fort 58 sheep 2 goats and 10 cattle were used half of which were given the vaccine on 5 and 17 May while the other half was untreated 114 All the animals were injected with the fresh virulent culture of anthrax bacillus on 31 May The official result was observed and analysed on 2 June in the presence of over 200 spectators All cattle survived vaccinated or not Pasteur had bravely predicted I hypothesized that the six vaccinated cows would not become very ill while the four unvaccinated cows would perish or at least become very ill 114 However all vaccinated sheep and goats survived while unvaccinated ones had died or were dying before the viewers 115 His report to the French Academy of Sciences on 13 June concludes By looking at everything from the scientific point of view the development of a vaccination against anthrax constitutes significant progress beyond the first vaccine developed by Jenner since the latter had never been obtained experimentally 114 Pasteur did not directly disclose how he prepared the vaccines used at Pouilly le Fort 116 112 Although his report indicated it as a live vaccine 114 his laboratory notebooks show that he actually used potassium dichromate killed vaccine as developed by Chamberland quite similar to Toussaint s method 117 56 118 The notion of a weak form of a disease causing immunity to the virulent version was not new this had been known for a long time for smallpox Inoculation with smallpox variolation was known to result in a much less severe disease and greatly reduced mortality in comparison with the naturally acquired disease 119 Edward Jenner had also studied vaccination using cowpox vaccinia to give cross immunity to smallpox in the late 1790s and by the early 1800s vaccination had spread to most of Europe 120 The difference between smallpox vaccination and anthrax or chicken cholera vaccination was that the latter two disease organisms had been artificially weakened so a naturally weak form of the disease organism did not need to be found 117 This discovery revolutionized work in infectious diseases and Pasteur gave these artificially weakened diseases the generic name of vaccines in honour of Jenner s discovery 121 Main article Koch Pasteur rivalry In 1876 Robert Koch had shown that Bacillus anthracis caused anthrax 122 In his papers published between 1878 and 1880 Pasteur only mentioned Koch s work in a footnote Koch met Pasteur at the Seventh International Medical Congress in 1881 A few months later Koch wrote that Pasteur had used impure cultures and made errors In 1882 Pasteur replied to Koch in a speech to which Koch responded aggressively 13 Koch stated that Pasteur tested his vaccine on unsuitable animals and that Pasteur s research was not properly scientific 5 In 1882 Koch wrote On the Anthrax Inoculation in which he refuted several of Pasteur s conclusions about anthrax and criticized Pasteur for keeping his methods secret jumping to conclusions and being imprecise In 1883 Pasteur wrote that he used cultures prepared in a similar way to his successful fermentation experiments and that Koch misinterpreted statistics and ignored Pasteur s work on silkworms 122 Swine erysipelas In 1882 Pasteur sent his assistant Louis Thuillier to southern France because of an epizootic of swine erysipelas 123 Thuillier identified the bacillus that caused the disease in March 1883 71 Pasteur and Thuillier increased the bacillus s virulence after passing it through pigeons Then they passed the bacillus through rabbits weakening it and obtaining a vaccine Pasteur and Thuillier incorrectly described the bacterium as a figure eight shape Roux described the bacterium as stick shaped in 1884 124 Rabies nbsp Captioned Hydrophobia caricature of Pasteur in the London magazine Vanity Fair January 1887Pasteur produced the first vaccine for rabies by growing the virus in rabbits and then weakening it by drying the affected nerve tissue 72 125 The rabies vaccine was initially created by Emile Roux a French doctor and a colleague of Pasteur who had produced a killed vaccine using this method 5 The vaccine had been tested in 50 dogs before its first human trial 126 127 This vaccine was used on 9 year old Joseph Meister on 6 July 1885 after the boy was badly mauled by a rabid dog 56 125 This was done at some personal risk for Pasteur since he was not a licensed physician and could have faced prosecution for treating the boy 50 After consulting with physicians he decided to go ahead with the treatment 128 Over 11 days Meister received 13 inoculations each inoculation using viruses that had been weakened for a shorter period of time 129 Three months later he examined Meister and found that he was in good health 128 130 Pasteur was hailed as a hero and the legal matter was not pursued 50 Analysis of his laboratory notebooks shows that Pasteur had treated two people before his vaccination of Meister One survived but may not actually have had rabies and the other died of rabies 129 131 Pasteur began treatment of Jean Baptiste Jupille on 20 October 1885 and the treatment was successful 129 Later in 1885 people including four children from the United States went to Pasteur s laboratory to be inoculated 128 In 1886 he treated 350 people of which only one developed rabies 129 The treatment s success laid the foundations for the manufacture of many other vaccines The first of the Pasteur Institutes was also built on the basis of this achievement 56 In The Story of San Michele Axel Munthe writes of some risks Pasteur undertook in the rabies vaccine research 132 Pasteur himself was absolutely fearless Anxious to secure a sample of saliva straight from the jaws of a rabid dog I once saw him with the glass tube held between his lips draw a few drops of the deadly saliva from the mouth of a rabid bull dog held on the table by two assistants their hands protected by leather gloves Because of his study in germs Pasteur encouraged doctors to sanitize their hands and equipment before surgery Prior to this few doctors or their assistants practiced these procedures 133 134 Ignaz Semmelweis and Joseph Lister had earlier practiced hand sanitizing in medical contexts in the 1860s 135 136 ControversiesA French national hero at age 55 in 1878 Pasteur discreetly told his family to never reveal his laboratory notebooks to anyone His family obeyed and all his documents were held and inherited in secrecy Finally in 1964 Pasteur s grandson and last surviving male descendant Pasteur Vallery Radot donated the papers to the French national library Yet the papers were restricted for historical studies until the death of Vallery Radot in 1971 The documents were given a catalogue number only in 1985 137 In 1995 the centennial of the death of Louis Pasteur a historian of science Gerald L Geison published an analysis of Pasteur s private notebooks in his The Private Science of Louis Pasteur and declared that Pasteur had given several misleading accounts and played deceptions in his most important discoveries 14 138 Max Perutz published a defense of Pasteur in The New York Review of Books 139 Based on further examinations of Pasteur s documents French immunologist Patrice Debre concluded in his bookLouis Pasteur 1998 that in spite of his genius Pasteur had some faults A book review states that Debre sometimes finds him unfair combative arrogant unattractive in attitude inflexible and even dogmatic 140 141 Fermentation Scientists before Pasteur had studied fermentation In the 1830s Charles Cagniard Latour Friedrich Traugott Kutzing and Theodor Schwann used microscopes to study yeasts and concluded that yeasts were living organisms In 1839 Justus von Liebig Friedrich Wohler and Jons Jacob Berzelius stated that yeast was not an organism and was produced when air acted on plant juice 64 In 1855 Antoine Bechamp Professor of Chemistry at the University of Montpellier conducted experiments with sucrose solutions and concluded that water was the factor for fermentation 142 He changed his conclusion in 1858 stating that fermentation was directly related to the growth of moulds which required air for growth He regarded himself as the first to show the role of microorganisms in fermentation 143 60 Pasteur started his experiments in 1857 and published his findings in 1858 April issue of Comptes Rendus Chimie Bechamp s paper appeared in January issue Bechamp noted that Pasteur did not bring any novel idea or experiments On the other hand Bechamp was probably aware of Pasteur s 1857 preliminary works With both scientists claiming priority on the discovery a dispute extending to several areas lasted throughout their lives 144 145 However Bechamp was on the losing side as the BMJ obituary remarked His name was associated with bygone controversies as to priority which it would be unprofitable to recall 146 Bechamp proposed the incorrect theory of microzymes According to K L Manchester anti vivisectionists and proponents of alternative medicine promoted Bechamp and microzymes unjustifiably claiming that Pasteur plagiarized Bechamp 60 Pasteur thought that succinic acid inverted sucrose In 1860 Marcellin Berthelot isolated invertase and showed that succinic acid did not invert sucrose 64 Pasteur believed that fermentation was only due to living cells He and Berthelot engaged in a long argument subject of vitalism in which Berthelot was vehemently opposed to any idea of vitalism 147 Hans Buchner discovered that zymase not an enzyme but a mixture of enzymes catalyzed fermentation showing that fermentation was catalyzed by enzymes within cells 148 Eduard Buchner also discovered that fermentation could take place outside living cells 149 Anthrax vaccine Pasteur publicly claimed his success in developing the anthrax vaccine in 1881 130 However his admirer turned rival Henry Toussaint was the one who developed the first vaccine Toussaint isolated the bacteria that caused chicken cholera later named Pasteurella in honour of Pasteur in 1879 and gave samples to Pasteur who used them for his own works 150 On 12 July 1880 Toussaint presented his successful result to the French Academy of Sciences using an attenuated vaccine against anthrax in dogs and sheep 151 Pasteur on grounds of jealousy contested the discovery by publicly displaying his vaccination method at Pouilly le Fort on 5 May 1881 152 Pasteur then gave a misleading account of the preparation of the anthrax vaccine used in the experiment He claimed that he made a live vaccine but used potassium dichromate 14 to inactivate anthrax spores a method similar to Toussaint s The promotional experiment was a success and helped Pasteur sell his products getting the benefits and glory 152 153 154 155 Experimental ethics Pasteur s experiments are often cited as against medical ethics especially on his vaccination of Meister He did not have any experience in medical practice and more importantly lacked a medical license This is often cited as a serious threat to his professional and personal reputation 156 157 His closest partner Emile Roux who had medical qualifications refused to participate in the clinical trial likely because he considered it unjust 129 However Pasteur executed vaccination of the boy under the close watch of practising physicians Jacques Joseph Grancher head of the Paris Children s Hospital s paediatric clinic and Alfred Vulpian a member of the Commission on Rabies He was not allowed to hold the syringe although the inoculations were entirely under his supervision 128 It was Grancher who was responsible for the injections and he defended Pasteur before the French National Academy of Medicine in the issue 158 Pasteur has also been criticized for keeping secrecy of his procedure and not giving proper pre clinical trials on animals 5 Pasteur stated that he kept his procedure secret in order to control its quality He later disclosed his procedures to a small group of scientists Pasteur wrote that he had successfully vaccinated 50 rabid dogs before using it on Meister 159 160 161 According to Geison Pasteur s laboratory notebooks show that he had vaccinated only 11 dogs 5 Meister never showed any symptoms of rabies 129 but the vaccination has not been proved to be the reason One source estimates the probability of Meister contracting rabies at 10 117 Awards and honoursPasteur was awarded 1 500 francs in 1853 by the Pharmaceutical Society for the synthesis of racemic acid 162 In 1856 the Royal Society of London presented him the Rumford Medal for his discovery of the nature of racemic acid and its relations to polarized light 163 and the Copley Medal in 1874 for his work on fermentation 164 He was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society ForMemRS in 1869 1 The French Academy of Sciences awarded Pasteur the 1859 Montyon Prize for experimental physiology in 1860 47 and the Jecker Prize in 1861 and the Alhumbert Prize in 1862 for his experimental refutation of spontaneous generation 80 165 Though he lost elections in 1857 and 1861 for membership to the French Academy of Sciences he won the 1862 election for membership to the mineralogy section 166 He was elected to permanent secretary of the physical science section of the academy in 1887 and held the position until 1889 167 In 1873 Pasteur was elected to the Academie Nationale de Medecine 168 and was made the commander in the Brazilian Order of the Rose 169 In 1881 he was elected to a seat at the Academie francaise left vacant by Emile Littre 170 Pasteur received the Albert Medal from the Royal Society of Arts in 1882 171 In 1883 he became foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences 172 In 1885 he was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society 173 On 8 June 1886 the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II awarded Pasteur with the Order of the Medjidie I Class and 10000 Ottoman liras 174 He was awarded the Cameron Prize for Therapeutics of the University of Edinburgh in 1889 175 Pasteur won the Leeuwenhoek Medal from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences for his contributions to microbiology in 1895 176 Pasteur was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1853 promoted to Officer in 1863 to Commander in 1868 to Grand Officer in 1878 and made a Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor in 1881 177 171 nbsp Pasteur Street Đường Pasteur in Da Nang VietnamLegacy nbsp Vulitsya Pastera or Pasteur Street in Odesa UkraineMain article List of things named after Louis Pasteur In many localities worldwide streets are named in his honor For example in the US Palo Alto and Irvine California Boston and Polk Florida adjacent to the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Jonquiere Quebec San Salvador de Jujuy and Buenos Aires Argentina Great Yarmouth in Norfolk in the United Kingdom Jericho and Wulguru in Queensland Australia Phnom Penh in Cambodia Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang Vietnam Batna in Algeria Bandung in Indonesia Tehran in Iran near the central campus of the Warsaw University in Warsaw Poland adjacent to the Odesa State Medical University in Odesa Ukraine Milan in Italy and Bucharest Cluj Napoca and Timișoara in Romania The Avenue Pasteur in Saigon Vietnam is one of the few streets in that city to retain its French name Avenue Louis Pasteur in the Longwood Medical and Academic Area in Boston was named in his honor in the French manner with Avenue preceding the name of the dedicatee 178 Both the Institut Pasteur and Universite Louis Pasteur were named after Pasteur The schools Lycee Pasteur in Neuilly sur Seine France and Lycee Louis Pasteur in Calgary Alberta Canada are named after him In South Africa the Louis Pasteur Private Hospital in Pretoria and Life Louis Pasteur Private Hospital Bloemfontein are named after him Louis Pasteur University Hospital in Kosice Slovakia is also named after Pasteur nbsp Louis Pasteur University Hospital Kosice SlovakiaA statue of Pasteur is erected at San Rafael High School in San Rafael California A bronze bust of him resides on the French Campus of Kaiser Permanente s San Francisco Medical Center in San Francisco The sculpture was designed by Harriet G Moore and cast in 1984 by Artworks Foundry 179 The UNESCO Institut Pasteur Medal was created on the centenary of Pasteur s death and is given every two years in his name in recognition of outstanding research contributing to a beneficial impact on human health 180 The French Academician Henri Mondor stated Louis Pasteur was neither a physician nor a surgeon but no one has done as much for medicine and surgery as he has 181 Pasteur Institute Main article Pasteur Institute After developing the rabies vaccine Pasteur proposed an institute for the vaccine 182 In 1887 fundraising for the Pasteur Institute began with donations from many countries The official statute was registered in 1887 stating that the institute s purposes were the treatment of rabies according to the method developed by M Pasteur and the study of virulent and contagious diseases 128 The institute was inaugurated on 14 November 1888 128 He brought together scientists with various specialties The first five departments were directed by two graduates of the Ecole Normale Superieure Emile Duclaux general microbiology research and Charles Chamberland microbe research applied to hygiene as well as a biologist Elie Metchnikoff morphological microbe research and two physicians Jacques Joseph Grancher rabies and Emile Roux technical microbe research One year after the inauguration of the institute Roux set up the first course of microbiology ever taught in the world then entitled Cours de Microbie Technique Course of microbe research techniques Since 1891 the Pasteur Institute had been extended to different countries and currently there are 32 institutes in 29 countries in various parts of the world 183 Personal life nbsp Pasteur in 1857Pasteur married Marie Pasteur nee Laurent in 1849 She was the daughter of the rector of the University of Strasbourg and was Pasteur s scientific assistant They had five children together three of whom died as children 184 Their eldest daughter Jeanne was born in 1850 She died from typhoid fever aged 9 whilst at the boarding school Arbois in 1859 In 1865 2 year old Camille died of a liver tumour Shortly after they decided to bring Cecile home from boarding school but she too died of typhoid fever on 23 May 1866 at the age of 12 Only Jean Baptiste b 1851 and Marie Louise b 1858 survived to adulthood Jean Baptiste would be a soldier in the Franco Prussian War between France and Prussia 185 Faith and spirituality His grandson Louis Pasteur Vallery Radot wrote that Pasteur had kept from his Catholic background only a spiritualism without religious practice 186 However Catholic observers often said that Pasteur remained an ardent Christian throughout his whole life and his son in law wrote in a biography of him Absolute faith in God and in Eternity and a conviction that the power for good given to us in this world will be continued beyond it were feelings which pervaded his whole life the virtues of the gospel had ever been present to him Full of respect for the form of religion which had been that of his forefathers he came simply to it and naturally for spiritual help in these last weeks of his life 187 The Literary Digest of 18 October 1902 gives this statement from Pasteur that he prayed while he worked Posterity will one day laugh at the foolishness of modern materialistic philosophers The more I study nature the more I stand amazed at the work of the Creator I pray while I am engaged at my work in the laboratory Maurice Vallery Radot grandson of the brother of the son in law of Pasteur and outspoken Catholic also holds that Pasteur fundamentally remained Catholic 188 According to both Pasteur Vallery Radot and Maurice Vallery Radot the following well known quotation attributed to Pasteur is apocryphal 189 The more I know the more nearly is my faith that of the Breton peasant Could I but know all I would have the faith of a Breton peasant s wife 16 According to Maurice Vallery Radot 190 the false quotation appeared for the first time shortly after the death of Pasteur 191 However despite his belief in God it has been said that his views were that of a freethinker rather than a Catholic a spiritual more than a religious man 192 193 He was also against mixing science with religion 194 195 Death In 1868 Pasteur suffered a severe brain stroke that paralysed the left side of his body but he recovered 196 A stroke or uremia in 1894 severely impaired his health 197 198 199 Failing to fully recover he died on 28 September 1895 near Paris 56 He was given a state funeral and was buried in the Cathedral of Notre Dame but his remains were reinterred in the Pasteur Institute in Paris 200 in a vault covered in depictions of his accomplishments in Byzantine mosaics 201 PublicationsPasteur s principal published works are 16 French Title Year English TitleEtudes sur le Vin 1866 Studies on WineEtudes sur le Vinaigre 1868 Studies on VinegarEtudes sur la Maladie des Vers a Soie 2 volumes 1870 Studies on Silk Worm DiseaseQuelques Reflexions sur la Science en France 1871 Some Reflections on Science in FranceEtudes sur la Biere 1876 Studies on BeerLes Microbes organises leur role dans la Fermentation la Putrefaction et la Contagion 1878 Microbes organized their role in fermentation putrefaction and the ContagionDiscours de Reception de M L Pasteur a l Academie francaise 1882 Speech by Mr L Pasteur on reception to the Academie francaiseTraitement de la Rage 1886 Treatment of Rabies The standard author abbreviation Pasteur is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 202 See also nbsp Biography portalInfection control Infectious disease Pasteur Institute Pasteurization The Story of Louis Pasteur a 1936 biographical film List of things named after Louis Pasteur Statue of Louis Pasteur Mexico CityReferences a b Fellows of the Royal Society London Royal Society Archived from the original on 16 March 2015 II Abdulhamid in Fransiz kimyagere yaptigi yardim ortaya cikti CNN Turk Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Asimov Asimov s Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology 2nd Revised edition History of the Cholera Vaccine Passport Health www passporthealthusa com Archived from the original on 21 January 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Ligon B Lee 2002 Biography Louis Pasteur A controversial figure in a debate on scientific ethics Seminars in Pediatric Infectious Diseases 13 2 134 141 doi 10 1053 spid 2002 125138 PMID 12122952 Adam P 1951 Louis Pasteur Father of bacteriology Canadian Journal of Medical Technology 13 3 126 128 PMID 14870064 Archived from the original on 30 April 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2021 a b Feinstein S 2008 Louis Pasteur The Father of Microbiology Enslow Publishers Inc pp 1 128 ISBN 978 1 59845 078 1 Fleming Alexander 1952 Freelance of Science British Medical Journal 2 4778 269 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 4778 269 PMC 2020971 Tan S Y Berman E 2008 Robert Koch 1843 1910 father of microbiology and Nobel laureate Singapore Medical Journal 49 11 854 855 PMID 19037548 Archived from the original on 22 April 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2021 Gradmann Christoph 2006 Robert Koch and the white death from tuberculosis to tuberculin Microbes and Infection 8 1 294 301 doi 10 1016 j micinf 2005 06 004 PMID 16126424 Archived from the original on 16 October 2022 Retrieved 29 April 2021 Lane Nick 2015 The unseen world reflections on Leeuwenhoek 1677 Concerning little animals Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 370 1666 20140344 doi 10 1098 rstb 2014 0344 PMC 4360124 PMID 25750239 Seckbach Joseph ed 2004 Origins Genesis Evolution and Diversity of Life Dordrecht The Netherlands Kluwer Academic Publishers p 20 ISBN 978 1 4020 1813 8 a b Ullmann Agnes August 2007 Pasteur Koch Distinctive Ways of Thinking about Infectious Diseases Microbe 2 8 383 387 Archived from the original on 10 May 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2007 a b c Geison Gerald L 1995 The Private Science of Louis Pasteur Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01552 1 Archived from the original on 26 October 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2014 Anderson Christopher 19 February 1993 Pasteur Notebooks Reveal Deception Science 259 5098 1117 doi 10 1126 science 259 5098 1117 b ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 8438162 a b c d James J Walsh 1913 Louis Pasteur In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Robbins Louise 2001 Louis Pasteur and the Hidden World of Microbes New York Oxford University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 19 512227 5 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Phillips Cynthia Priwer Shana 2018 101 Things You Didn t Know about Einstein Sex Science and the Secrets of the Universe Adams Media p 21 Geffner Donna 2013 Famous People with Learning Disabilities Gemm Learning Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Thomson Oliver 2013 A Short History of Human Error Arena Books Ltd p 92 ISBN 978 1909421264 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 12 13 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Robbins Louise 2001 Louis Pasteur and the Hidden World of Microbes New York Oxford University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 19 512227 5 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 11 12 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 10 12 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 14 17 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Louis Pasteur 1822 1895 ENS www ens psl eu Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 Retrieved 30 October 2021 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 19 20 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Robbins Louise 2001 Louis Pasteur and the Hidden World of Microbes New York Oxford University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 19 512227 5 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 20 21 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 15 17 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 23 24 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 a b Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press p 502 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 29 30 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Louis Pasteur These de Chimie These de Physique 1847 Archived from the original on 31 October 2021 Retrieved 31 October 2021 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 28 29 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 37 38 Holmes Samuel J 1924 Louis Pasteur Harcourt Brace and company pp 34 36 Robbins Louise E 2001 Louis Pasteur and the Hidden World of Microbes Oxford University Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 19 028404 6 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 502 503 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Without this work that I was asked to do for the Correspondence of the Institute I would have stayed in Strasbourg But you understand that this leave that these missions made me have with full salary is an irregularity that needs to be covered by a health reason Pasteur letter of 25 February 1854 to his father in Pasteur Correspondence t 1 Paris 1940 p 261 Pasteur letter of 8 May 1854 to his father in Pasteur Correspondence t 1 Paris 1940 p 267 This episode in Pasteur s career is noted by Pierre Yves Laurioz Louis Pasteur La realite apres la legende Paris 2003 pp 79 81 On Pasteur s attitude towards money see Richard Moreau La Prehistoire de Pasteur Paris L Harmattan 2000 pp 257 262 a b Louis Pasteur Science History Institute June 2016 Archived from the original on 21 March 2018 Retrieved 20 March 2018 L Pasteur Discours prononce a Douai le 7 decembre 1854 a l occasion de l installation solennelle de la Faculte des lettres de Douai et de la Faculte des sciences de Lille Speech delivered at Douai on 7 December 1854 on the occasion of his formal inauguration to the Faculty of Letters of Douai and the Faculty of Sciences of Lille reprinted in Pasteur Vallery Radot ed Oeuvres de Pasteur Paris France Masson and Co 1939 vol 7 p 131 Archived 9 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Elborg Forster Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 119 120 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Retrieved 27 January 2015 a b c Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press pp 505 507 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 246 Heilbron J L ed 2003 Pasteur Louis The Oxford Companion to the History of Modern Science Oxford University Press p 617 ISBN 978 0 19 974376 6 a b c Hook Sue Vander 2011 Louis Pasteur Groundbreaking Chemist amp Biologist Minnesota ABDO Publishing Company pp 8 112 ISBN 978 1 61758 941 6 a b c d e H D Flack 2009 Louis Pasteur s discovery of molecular chirality and spontaneous resolution in 1848 together with a complete review of his crystallographic and chemical work Archived 8 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Acta Crystallographica Section A vol 65 pp 371 389 L Pasteur 1848 Memoire sur la relation qui peut exister entre la forme cristalline et la composition chimique et sur la cause de la polarisation rotatoire Archived 21 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Memoir on the relationship that can exist between crystalline form and chemical composition and on the cause of rotary polarization Comptes rendus de l Academie des sciences Paris 26 535 538 L Pasteur 1848 Sur les relations qui peuvent exister entre la forme cristalline la composition chimique et le sens de la polarisation rotatoire On the relations that can exist between crystalline form and chemical composition and the sense of rotary polarization Annales de Chimie et de Physique 3rd series vol 24 no 6 pp 442 459 George B Kauffman and Robin D Myers 1998 Pasteur s resolution of racemic acid A sesquicentennial retrospect and a new translation The Chemical Educator vol 3 no 6 page needed Joseph Gal Louis Pasteur Language and Molecular Chirality I Background and Dissymmetry Chirality 23 2011 1 16 a b c d e Cohn David V 18 December 2006 Pasteur University of Louisville Archived from the original on 23 March 2017 Retrieved 2 December 2007 Fortunately Pasteur s colleagues Chamberlain sic and Roux followed up the results of a research physician Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint who had reported a year earlier that carbolic acid heated anthrax serum would immunize against anthrax These results were difficult to reproduce and discarded although as it turned out Toussaint had been on the right track This led Pasteur and his assistants to substitute an anthrax vaccine prepared by a method similar to that of Toussaint and different from what Pasteur had announced Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 79 Vallery Radot Rene 1907 La vie de Pasteur in French Paris Librairie Hachette p 98 Pasteur Louis 1857 Memoire sur la fermentation appelee lactique Comptes Rendus Chimie in French 45 913 916 Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 11 March 2017 a b c Manchester K L 2007 Louis Pasteur fermentation and a rival South African Journal of Science 103 9 10 377 380 Archived from the original on 26 October 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2014 Pasteur Louis 1857 Memoire sur la fermentation alcoolique Comptes Rendus Chimie in French 45 6 1032 1036 PMC 2229983 Pasteur Louis 1858 Nouveaux faits concernant l histoire de la fermentation alcoolique Comptes Rendus Chimie in French 47 1011 1013 Pasteur Louis 1858 Nouveaux faits concernant l histoire de la fermentation alcoolique Annales de Chimie et de Physique 3rd Series in French 52 404 418 a b c d e Barnett James A Barnett Linda 2011 Yeast Research A Historical Overview Washington DC ASM Press ISBN 978 1 55581 516 5 Zimmermann F K Entian K D eds 1997 Yeast Sugar Metabolism CRC Press pp 20 21 ISBN 978 1 56676 466 7 a b Bowden Mary Ellen Crow Amy Beth Sullivan Tracy 2003 Pharmaceutical achievers the human face of pharmaceutical research Philadelphia Chemical Heritage Press ISBN 978 0 941901 30 7 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 104 Nelson Bryn 2009 The Lingering Heat over Pasteurized Milk Chemical Heritage Magazine 27 1 Archived from the original on 21 March 2018 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Hicks Jesse A Fresh Breath Chemical Heritage Magazine Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2015 a b c Hatcher Paul Battey Nick 2011 Biological Diversity Exploiters and Exploited John Wiley amp Sons pp 88 89 91 ISBN 978 0 470 97986 0 a b c Berche P 2012 Louis Pasteur from crystals of life to vaccination Clinical Microbiology and Infection 18 s5 1 6 doi 10 1111 j 1469 0691 2012 03945 x PMID 22882766 a b c d e Schwartz M 2001 The life and works of Louis Pasteur Journal of Applied Microbiology 91 4 597 601 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2672 2001 01495 x PMID 11576293 S2CID 39020116 a b Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 87 88 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 141 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 156 a b Magner Lois N 2002 History of the Life Sciences 3 ed New York Marcel Dekker pp 251 252 ISBN 978 0 203 91100 6 Roll Hansen Nils 1979 Experimental Method and Spontaneous Generation The Controversy between Pasteur and Pouchet 1859 64 PDF Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences XXXIV 3 273 292 doi 10 1093 jhmas XXXIV 3 273 PMID 383780 S2CID 39800747 Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2019 Farley J Geison GL 1974 Science politics and spontaneous generation in nineteenth century France the Pasteur Pouchet debate Bulletin of the History of Medicine 48 2 161 198 PMID 4617616 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company p 64 a b c d Porter JR 1961 Louis Pasteur achievements and disappointments 1861 Bacteriological Reviews 25 4 389 403 doi 10 1128 MMBR 25 4 389 403 1961 PMC 441122 PMID 14037390 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company pp 96 98 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 63 67 Pastuer Louis 1882 Memoire sur les corpuscules organises qui existent dans l atmosphere examen de la doctrine des generations spontanees Wellcome Collection Archived from the original on 1 May 2021 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Carter K C 1991 The development of Pasteur s concept of disease causation and the emergence of specific causes in nineteenth century medicine Bulletin of the History of Medicine 65 4 528 548 JSTOR 44442642 PMID 1802317 Archived from the original on 25 January 2022 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Jimmy Drulhon Louis Pasteur Five years in the Cevennes Ed Hermann 2009 Pasteur stayed and carried out his scientific work at the magnanerie of Pont Gisquet on the road to Saint Jean du Pin See Google Street Archived 7 April 2022 at the Wayback Machine He had known it flacherie for a long time since his first stay in the South in 1865 where one of the two farms that had served as a starting point departure to his deductions was affected by this disease at the same time as that of the corpuscles Emile Duclaux Pasteur Histoire d un esprit pp 218 219 available on Gallica Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine This denomination of white dead used by the Abbe de Sauvages and several other writers is inaccurate this is why I thought it necessary to add that of dead flats vulgarly used in several departments and which designates very well the state of softness and flaccidity in which the worms dead of this disease are found Pierre Hubert Nysten Research on the diseases of silkworms Paris 1808 p 5 available on Google Books See account of Quatrefages reproduced in L Pasteur Etudes sur la maladie des vers a soie Paris 1870 Complete Works of Pasteur t 4 p 27 online Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine But the cases of association were so frequent precisely because the disease of the corpuscles was so widespread that Pasteur had thought that the two conditions were linked to each other and should disappear together Emile Duclaux Pasteur Histoire d un esprit pp 218 219 online Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Pasteur expressed this opinion in particular in Nouvelles etudes sur la maladie des vers a soie Comptes rendus de l Academie des sciences t 63 1866 pp 126 142 I am very much inclined to believe that there is no actual actual disease of silkworms The disease complained of seems to me to have always existed but to a lesser degree Furthermore I have serious grounds for believing that most of the diseases of the silkworm which have been known for a long time are linked to the one which occupies us muscardine and perhaps grasserie excepted p 136 Available at Gallica Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Same thing in a letter of June 27 1866 to Dumas all the other so called ancient diseases of the silkworm minus the muscardine and perhaps the grasserie such as the disease of motrs flats petits passis arpians are only forms of the actual disease Pasteur Correspondance t 2 p 265 Quoted by Ph Decourt Les verites indesirables Paris 1989 p 173 and by P Pinet Pasteur et la phiolosophie Paris 2004 p 158 Sur la maladie des vers a soie Lettre de M L Pasteur a M Dumas Comptes rendus de l Academie des sciences meeting of 3 June 1867 t 64 p 1113 Available at Gallica Archived 7 April 2022 at the Wayback Machine Philippe Decourt Les verites indesirables Paris 1989 pp 165 193 accuses Pasteur of a denial of justice towards Antoine Bechamp who studied pebrine at the same time as Pasteur and immediately affirmed the parasitic nature of the disease Balbiani Balbiani Recherches sur les corpuscules de la pebrine et sur leur mode de propagation Comptes rendus de l Academie des Sciences session of 27 August 1866 vol 63 1866 pp 388 391 available at Gallica Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Balbiani begins in this manner Among all the contradictory opinions which have been expressed on the nature of the corpuscles of the pebrine the most debatable in my opinion is that which consists in assimilating them to anatomical elements either normal or more or less altered or to morbid products such as pus globules etc This opinion was refuted more than eight years ago by Professor Lebert but I believe I can also bring against the way of seeing cited above more decisive proofs based on the observation of the phenomena which these corpuscles present in their evolution phenomena which put beyond doubt their close relationship with the parasitic organisms known under the name of Psorospermia As for the opinions expressed by Mr Balbiani on the nature of the corpuscles although I do not share them I will take great care to examine them for two reasons because they are from a skilful observer and because I still only have preconceived views on the objects they concern to which I do not agree more than reason There is more I earnestly hope that the ideas of MM Balbiani and Leydig are true Pasteur Observations au sujet d une Note de M Balbiani relative a la maladie des vers a soie Comptes rendus de l Academie des Sciences meeting of 10 September 1866 vol 63 1866 pp 441 443 On 29 May 1867 Pasteur wrote to Dumas again Despite all that I would have to say about the notes of Bechamp Estor Balbiani and on the articles that the first two insert in the Messager du Midi I take your advice I do not answer If you knew how erroneous it is to say that this disease is not constitutional and only parasitic Its essential character is precisely its constitutional character Quoted by Ph Decourt Les verites indesirables Paris 1989 p 190 P Debre Louis Pasteur Flammarion 1994 p 219 In his Etudes sur la maladie des vers a soie Studies on silkworm disease published in 1870 Pasteur s Complete Works vol 4 available at Gallica Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Pasteur reports that he consulted Leydig on the question of the living nature of corpuscles One of his letters to Leydig is from December 1866 He admits that in substance he adopted the opinions of Leydig and Balbiani but he contradicts them on the question of the mode of formation of the corpuscles pp 135 137 and 138 In 1884 Balbiani will examine Pasteur s theory on the development of corpuscles and will conclude as follows I believe that it is useless to dwell any longer on the observations of M Pasteur which I think I can characterize with a single word by saying that their author proves in it how little he is familiar with the researches of biology But with this reservation I do justice to his work which has rendered sericulture farmers a real service by enabling them to recognize a healthy seed from a diseased seed G Balbiani Lecons sus les sporozoaires Paris 1884 pp 160 163 online On Pasteur s errors in the study of silkworms and his own judgment on these errors see Richard Moreau Le dernier pli cachete de Louis Pasteur a l Academie des sciences La vie des sciences Comptes rendus serie generale t 6 1989 n 5 pp 403 434 online Archived 30 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Louis Pasteur Etudes sur la maladie des vers a soie Œuvres completes t 4 pp 166 167 available at Gallica Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Pasteur mentions Osimo s ideas in Louis Pasteur Etudes sur la maladie des vers a soie Œuvres completes t 4 pp 38 39 available at Gallica Archived 26 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Summarizing a development by Emile Duclaux Emile Duclaux Pasteur histoire d un esprit Sceaux 1896 p 198 available at bpt6k764468 f203 notice Gallica Archived 6 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine P Debre wrote that Pasteur was led to propose a seed sorting method almost identical to that recommended a few years earlier by Orcino read Osimo If the latter had failed asserts Pasteur it was through a lack of confidence which of course is not his case P Debre Louis Pasteur Flammarion 1994 p 210 Patrice Debre Louis Pasteur Flammarion 1995 p 246 Elie Reynier La soie en Vivarais 1921 online Archived 4 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine Comptes rendus stenographiques du Congres international sericicole tenu a Paris du 5 au 10 septembre 1878 Paris 1879 pp 27 38 Œuvres completes of Pasteur t 4 pp 698 713 spec 699 and 713 available on Gallica Archived 1 August 2013 at archive today G Balbiani Lecons sus les sporozoaires Paris 1884 pp 160 163 167 168 online a b Plotkin Stanley A ed 2011 History of Vaccine Development Springer pp 35 36 ISBN 978 1 4419 1339 5 a b Barranco Caroline 28 September 2020 The first live attenuated vaccines Nature Milestones Archived from the original on 2 August 2021 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Dixon Bernard 1980 The hundred years of Louis Pasteur New Scientist No 1221 pp 30 32 Sternberg George M 1901 A Textbook of Bacteriology New York William Wood and Company pp 278 279 pasteur loir anthrax Artenstein Andrew W ed 2009 Vaccines A Biography Springer p 75 ISBN 978 1 4419 1108 7 a b c Smith Kendall A 2012 Louis pasteur the father of immunology Frontiers in Immunology 3 68 doi 10 3389 fimmu 2012 00068 PMC 3342039 PMID 22566949 This way which the genius of Pasteur had opened and which became so fruitful soon proved to be closed with regard to the anti pasteurellic vaccination of the hen Difficulties arose in the regularity of attenuation and maintenance of virulence to a definite and fixed degree G Lesbouyries La pathologie des oiseaux Paris 1941 p 340 quoted by Herve Bazin L Histoire des vaccinations John Libbey Eurotext 2008 p 155 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 123 125 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company pp 303 305 Tizard Ian 1998 Grease Anthraxgate and Kennel Cough A Revisionist History of Early Veterinary Vaccines In Schultz Ronald D ed Veterinary Vaccines and Diagnostics Academic Press pp 12 14 ISBN 978 0 08 052683 6 a b Bazin Herve 2011 Vaccinations a History From Lady Montagu to Jenner and genetic engineering John Libbey Eurotext pp 196 197 ISBN 978 2 7420 1344 9 Pasteur L Chamberland C Roux E 1881 Le vaccin de charbon Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l Academie des Sciences in French 92 666 668 Archived from the original on 4 March 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2017 a b c d Pasteur Louis Chamberland Roux 2002 Summary report of the experiments conducted at Pouilly le Fort near Melun on the anthrax vaccination 1881 The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 75 1 59 62 PMC 2588695 PMID 12074483 Smith Kendall A 2005 Wanted an Anthrax vaccine Dead or Alive Medical Immunology 4 1 5 doi 10 1186 1476 9433 4 5 PMC 1087873 PMID 15836780 Plotkin Stanley A ed 2011 History of Vaccine Development Springer pp 37 38 ISBN 978 1 4419 1339 5 a b c Giese Matthias ed 2013 Molecular Vaccines From Prophylaxis to Therapy Vol 1 Springer p 4 ISBN 978 3 7091 1419 3 Loir A 1938 A l ombre de Pasteur Le mouvement sanitaire pp 18 160 Artenstein Andrew W ed 2009 Vaccines A Biography Springer p 10 ISBN 978 1 4419 1108 7 Bazin Herve 2011 Vaccinations a History From Lady Montagu to Jenner and genetic engineering John Libbey Eurotext pp 66 67 82 ISBN 978 2 7420 1344 9 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 332 a b De Paolo Charles 2006 Epidemic Disease and Human Understanding A Historical Analysis of Scientific and Other Writings McFarland pp 103 111 114 ISBN 978 0 7864 2506 8 Plotkin Stanley A ed 2011 History of Vaccine Development Springer p 39 ISBN 978 1 4419 1339 5 Bazin Herve 2011 Vaccination A History John Libbey Eurotext p 211 ISBN 978 2 7420 0775 2 a b Wood Margaret E 3 June 2016 Biting Back Chemical Heritage Magazine 28 2 7 Archived from the original on 21 March 2018 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Hook Sue Vander 2011 Louis Pasteur Groundbreaking Chemist amp Biologist ABDO p 8 ISBN 978 1 61714 783 8 Corole D Bos 2014 Louis Pasteur and the Rabies Virus Louis Pasteur Meets Joseph Meister Awesome Stories Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 22 November 2014 a b c d e f Wasik Bill Murphy Monica 2013 Rabid A Cultural History of the World s Most Diabolical Virus New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 1 101 58374 6 a b c d e f Jackson Alan C ed 2013 Rabies Scientific Basis of the Disease and Its Management 3rd ed Amsterdam Academic Press pp 3 6 ISBN 978 0 12 397230 9 a b Trueman C Louis Pasteur HistoryLearningSite co uk Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 3 July 2013 Artenstein Andrew W ed 2009 Vaccines A Biography Springer p 79 ISBN 978 1 4419 1108 7 Munthe Axel 2010 First published 1929 V Patients The Story of San Michele Hachette UK ISBN 978 1 84854 526 7 Melin Maxwell David 2016 The Industrial Revolution and the Advent of Modern Surgery Intersect The Stanford Journal of Science Technology and Society 9 2 online 1 13 Archived from the original on 25 August 2021 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Magerl Mary Ann 2008 Operating Room Sanitation Routine Cleaning Versus Terminal Cleaning Perioperative Nursing Clinics 3 2 143 148 doi 10 1016 j cpen 2008 01 007 Archived from the original on 26 May 2021 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Vermeil T Peters A Kilpatrick C Pires D Allegranzi B Pittet D 2019 Hand hygiene in hospitals anatomy of a revolution Journal of Hospital Infection 101 4 383 392 doi 10 1016 j jhin 2018 09 003 PMID 30237118 S2CID 52306024 Archived from the original on 19 February 2022 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Larson E 1989 Innovations in health care antisepsis as a case study American Journal of Public Health 79 1 92 99 doi 10 2105 AJPH 79 1 92 PMC 1349481 PMID 2642372 Geison Gerald L 2014 The Private Science of Louis Pasteur Princeton University Press p 3 ISBN 978 1 4008 6408 9 Altman Lawrence K 1995 Revisionist history sees Pasteur as liar who stole rival s ideas The New York Times on the Web 16 C1 C3 PMID 11647062 Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 17 February 2017 21 December 1995 NY Review of Books 1 Archived 29 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine letters 2 Archived 20 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine 3 Archived 29 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Kauffman George B 1999 Book Review Louis Louis Louis American Scientist Archived from the original on 27 October 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Bechamp A 1855 Note sur l influence que l eau pure et certaines dissolutions salines exercent sur le sucre de canne Comptes Rendus Chimie 40 436 438 Bechamp A 1858 De l influence que l eau pur ou chargee de diverse sels exerce a froid sur the sucre de canne Comptes Rendus Chimie 46 4 47 Cadeddu A 2000 The heuristic function of error in the scientific methodology of Louis Pasteur the case of the silkworm diseases History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 22 1 3 28 PMID 11258099 Manchester KL 2001 Antoine Bechamp pere de la biologie Oui ou non Endeavour 25 2 68 73 doi 10 1016 S0160 9327 00 01361 2 PMID 11484677 Anonymous 1908 Obituary Professor Bechamp The British Medical Journal 1 2471 1150 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 2471 1150 b PMC 2436492 Friedmann H C 1997 From Friedrich Wohler s urine to Eduard Buchner s alcohol In Cornish Bowden A ed New Beer in an Old Bottle Eduard Buchner and the Growth of Biochemical Knowledge Universitat de Valencia Valencia Spain pp 67 122 ISBN 84 370 3328 4 Windelspecht Michael 2003 Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments Inventions and Discoveries of the 19th Century Westport Greenwood Publishing Group p 100 ISBN 978 0 313 31969 3 Dworkin Martin Falkow Stanley Rosenberg Eugene Schleifer Karl Heinz Stackebrandt Erko eds 2006 The Prokaryotes Vol 1 Symbiotic Associations Biotechnology Applied Microbiology Springer pp 285 286 ISBN 978 0 387 25476 0 Swabe Joanna 2002 Animals Disease and Human Society Human animal Relations and the Rise of Veterinary Medicine Routledge p 83 ISBN 978 1 134 67540 1 Jones Susan D 2010 Death in a Small Package A Short History of Anthrax JHU Press p 69 ISBN 978 1 4214 0252 9 a b Chevallier Jussiau N 2010 Henry Toussaint and Louis Pasteur Rivalry over a vaccine PDF Histoire des Sciences Medicales 44 1 55 64 PMID 20527335 Archived PDF from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Williams E 2010 The forgotten giants behind Louis Pasteur contributions by the veterinarians Toussaint and Galtier Veterinary Heritage 33 2 33 39 PMID 21466009 Flower Darren R 2008 Bioinformatics for Vaccinology Chichester John Wiley amp Sons p 31 ISBN 978 0 470 69982 9 Giese Matthias 2013 Molecular Vaccines From Prophylaxis to Therapy Volume 1 Springer Science amp Business Media p 4 ISBN 978 3 7091 1419 3 Retrieved 17 March 2022 Geison Gerald L 1990 Pasteur Roux and Rabies Scientific Clinical Mentalities Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 45 3 341 365 doi 10 1093 jhmas 45 3 341 PMID 2212608 Forster Patrice Debre translated by Elborg 2000 Louis Pasteur Johns Hopkins pbk ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 455 456 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gelfand T 2002 11 January 1887 the day medicine changed Joseph Grancher s defense of Pasteur s treatment for rabies Bulletin of the History of Medicine 76 4 698 718 doi 10 1353 bhm 2002 0176 PMID 12446976 S2CID 33145788 Murphy Timothy F 2004 Case Studies in Biomedical Research Ethics Cambridge MIT Press p 83 ISBN 978 0 262 63286 7 Geison GL 1978 Pasteur s work on rabies reexamining the ethical issues The Hastings Center Report 8 2 26 33 doi 10 2307 3560403 JSTOR 3560403 PMID 348641 Hoenig Leonard J 1986 Triumph and controversy Pasteur s preventive treatment of rabies as reported in JAMA Archives of Neurology 43 4 397 399 doi 10 1001 archneur 1986 00520040075024 PMID 3513741 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press p 503 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Lord Wrottesley 1856 Address Delivered before the Royal Society Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 8 254 257 doi 10 1098 rspl 1856 0067 S2CID 186212787 Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Anniversary Meeting Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 23 156 163 68 70 1874 doi 10 1098 rspl 1874 0007 S2CID 186209582 Manchester Keith 2001 Exploding the Pasteurian legend Endeavour 25 4 148 152 doi 10 1016 S0160 9327 00 01389 2 PMID 11590017 Also Manchester K 2001 Exploding the Pasteurian legend Trends Biochem Sci 26 10 632 636 doi 10 1016 s0968 0004 01 01909 0 PMID 11590017 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company pp 50 51 69 Biographie Maison de Louis Pasteur in French Archived from the original on 21 April 2021 Retrieved 13 February 2017 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 225 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press p 508 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press p 509 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 a b Frankland Percy 1901 Pasteur Cassell and Company p 211 Louis Pasteur 1822 1895 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on 21 July 2015 Retrieved 19 July 2015 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Archived from the original on 21 May 2021 Retrieved 21 May 2021 Sevan Nisanyan Yanlis Cumhuriyet Istanbul Kirmizi Yayinlari 2009 S 263 Lutzker Edythe 1 January 1978 Cameron Prizewinner Waldemar M Haffkine C I E Clio Medica Acta Academiae Internationalis Historiae Medicinae 13 3 4 269 276 doi 10 1163 9789004418257 030 ISBN 978 9004418257 PMID 89932 Archived from the original on 24 September 2021 Retrieved 12 May 2020 Leeuwenhoek Medal Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 7 February 2017 Louis Pasteur Grande chancellerie de la Legion d honneur in French Archived from the original on 7 February 2017 Retrieved 7 February 2017 Remembrance of Things Pasteur Archived from the original on 14 October 2010 Louis Pasteur sculpture Save Outdoor Sculpture Smithsonian American Art Museum Archived from the original on 29 September 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Louis Pasteur 1822 1895 UNESCO Archived from the original on 26 May 2017 Retrieved 21 January 2018 Henri Mondor Pasteur Archived from the original on 5 June 2020 Retrieved 31 October 2021 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 428 Institut Pasteur International Network pasteur international org Archived from the original on 6 June 2014 Retrieved 3 July 2013 Ogilvie Marilyn Bailey Harvey Joy Dorothy 2000 The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science L Z Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 92040 7 History Institut Pasteur 10 November 2016 Archived from the original on 10 March 2021 Retrieved 19 June 2022 Pasteur Vallery Radot Letter to Paul Dupuy 1939 quoted by Hilaire Cuny Pasteur et le mystere de la vie Paris Seghers 1963 pp 53 54 Patrice Pinet Pasteur et la philosophie Paris 2005 pp 134 135 quotes analogous assertions of Pasteur Vallery Radot with references to Pasteur Vallery Radot Pasteur inconnu p 232 and Andre George Pasteur Paris 1958 p 187 According to Maurice Vallery Radot Pasteur 1994 p 378 the false quotation appeared for the first time in the Semaine religieuse du diocese de Versailles 6 October 1895 p 153 shortly after the death of Pasteur Vallery Radot 1911 vol 2 p 240 Vallery Radot Maurice 1994 Pasteur Paris Perrin pp 377 407 Pasteur Vallery Radot Letter to Paul Dupuy 1939 quoted by Hilaire Cuny Pasteur et le mystere de la vie Paris Seghers 1963 pp 53 54 Pasteur 1994 p 378 In Pasteur s Semaine religieuse du diocese de Versailles 6 October 1895 p 153 Joseph McCabe 1945 A Biographical Dictionary of Ancient Medieval and Modern Freethinkers Haldeman Julius Publications Archived from the original on 13 January 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2012 The anonymous Catholic author quotes as his authority the standard biography by Vallery Radot yet this describes Pasteur as a freethinker and this is confirmed in the preface to the English translation by Sir W Osler who knew Pasteur personally Vallery Radot was himself a Catholic yet admits that Pasteur believed only in an Infinite and hoped for a future life Pasteur publicly stated this himself in his Academy speech in 1822 in V R He said The idea of God is a form of the idea of the Infinite whether it is called Brahma Allah Jehova or Jesus The biographer says that in his last days he turned to the Church but the only evidence he gives is that he liked to read the life of St Vincent de Paul and he admits that he did not receive the sacraments at death Relatives put rosary beads in his hands and the Catholic Encyclopedia claims him as a Catholic in virtue of the fact and of an anonymous and inconclusive statement about him Wheeler says in his Dictionary of Freethinkers that in his prime Pasteur was Vice President of the British Secular Atheist Union and Wheeler was the chief Secularist writer of the time The evidence is overwhelming Yet the Catholic scientist Sir Bertram Windle assures his readers that no person who knows anything about him can doubt the sincerity of his attachment to the Catholic Church and all Catholic writers use much the same scandalous language Patrice Debre 2000 Louis Pasteur JHU Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Does this mean that Pasteur was bound to a religious ideal His attitude was that of a believer not of a sectarian One of his most brilliant disciples Elie Metchnikoff was to attest that he spoke of religion only in general terms In fact Pasteur evaded the question by claiming quite simply that religion has no more place in science than science has in religion A biologist more than a chemist a spiritual more than a religious man Pasteur was held back only by the lack of more powerful technical means and therefore had to limit himself to identifying germs and explaining their generation Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg JHU Press p 368 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Pasteur advocated separation of science and religion In each one of us there are two men the scientist and the man of faith or of doubt These two spheres are separate and woe to those who want to make them encroach upon one another in the present state of our knowledge Patrice Debre 2000 Louis Pasteur JHU Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company pp 159 168 Debre Patrice 2000 Louis Pasteur Translated by Forster Elborg Baltimore JHU Press p 512 ISBN 978 0 8018 6529 9 Keim Albert Lumet Louis 1914 Louis Pasteur Frederick A Stokes Company p 206 Vallery Radot Rene 1919 The Life of Pasteur Translated by Devonshire R L London Constable amp Company p 458 Frankland Percy 1901 Pasteur Cassell and Company pp 217 219 Campbell D M January 1915 The Pasteur Institute of Paris American Journal of Veterinary Medicine 10 1 29 31 Retrieved 8 February 2010 International Plant Names Index Pasteur Further readingBenz Francis E 1938 Pasteur Knight of the Laboratory New York Dodd Mead amp Company Archived from the original on 12 February 2023 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Debre P E Forster 1998 Louis Pasteur Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5808 6 Duclaux E Translated by Erwin F Smith and Florence Hedges 1920 Louis Pasteur The History of a Mind Philadelphia W B Saunders Company ASIN B001RV90WA Geison Gerald L 1995 The Private Science of Louis Pasteur Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03442 3 Cedric Grimoult Pasteur Le mythe au coeur de l action ou le combattant Paris Ellipses coll Biographies et mythes historiques 2021 332 p de Kruif Paul 1926 Microbe Hunters Blue Ribbon Books New York Harcourt Brace amp Company Inc Retrieved 9 October 2020 chapters III PASTEUR Microbes are a Menace and V PASTEUR And the Mad Dog Latour Bruno 1988 The Pasteurization of France Boston Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 65761 8 Reynolds Moira Davison How Pasteur Changed History The Story of Louis Pasteur and the Pasteur Institute 1994 Williams Roger L 1957 Gaslight and Shadow The World of Napoleon III 1851 1870 New York Macmillan Company ISBN 978 0 8371 9821 7 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louis Pasteur nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Louis Pasteur nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Louis Pasteur nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Pasteur Louis The Institut Pasteur Foundation dedicated to the prevention and treatment of diseases through biological research education and public health activities The Pasteur Foundation A US nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the mission of the Institut Pasteur in Paris Full archive of newsletters available online containing examples of US Tributes to Louis Pasteur Pasteur s Papers on the Germ Theory The Life and Work of Louis Pasteur Pasteur Brewing The Pasteur Galaxy Germ Theory and Its Applications to Medicine and Surgery 1878 Louis Pasteur 1822 1895 profile AccessExcellence org Works by or about Louis Pasteur at Internet Archive Works by Louis Pasteur at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Newspaper clippings about Louis Pasteur in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Pasteur Œuvre tome 1 Dissymetrie moleculaire in French 1922 1939 Pasteur Œuvre tome 2 Fermentations et generations dites spontanees in French 1922 1939 Comptes rendus de l Academie des sciences Archived 11 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Articles published by Pasteur in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Pasteur amp oldid 1197838491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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