A LOST CHAPTER IN THE HISTORY OF BIOLOGY
by Ethel D. Hume
352 pages
ISBN 978-0980297607
RRP US$26.95 UK£12.99
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Available from: AMAZON US | AMAZON UK | ABEBOOKS | BORDERS UK
READER REVIEW: “This historical view of modern medicine, the germ theory, illustrates clearly how truth is circumvented in favor of the special interests of the powerful. The masses not privy to this information suffer needlessly when independent researchers who discover facts not in alignment with modern medical beliefs go unheeded. Modern medicine needs to return to this bifurcation point and take the pleomorphic path. When this phenomenon is truly understood drugs poisons will disappear as do all things which outlive their usefulness. This book is required reading for anyone choosing to understand how the body heals.” (from Amazon)
This volume contains new editions of two books which have been available only sporadically in the decades since their publication.
R.Pearson’s Pasteur: Plagiarist, Imposter was originally published in 1942, and is a succinct introduction to both Louis Pasteur and Antoine Bechamp, and the reasons behind the troubled relationship that they shared for their entire working lives.
Whereas Pearson’s work is a valuable introduction to an often complex topic, it is Ethel Douglas Hume’s expansive and well-documented Bechamp or Pasteur? A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology which provides the main body of evidence. It covers the main points of contention between Bechamp and Pasteur in depth sufficient to satisfy any degree of scientific or historical scrutiny, and it contains, wherever possible, detailed references to the source material and supporting evidence.
Virtually no claim in Ms Hume’s book is undocumented. The reader will soon discern that neither Mr Pearson nor Ms Hume could ever be called fans of Pasteur or his ’science’. They both declare their intentions openly; that they wish to contribute to the undoing of a massive medical and scientific fraud.
The text of both titles has been extensively re-edited so as to modernise the use of English, and make the book easier to read than has been the case with previous facsimile editions. Included are new renderings of all the diagrams that were included in the original edition of Mr Pearson’s Pasteur: Plagiarist, Imposter, plus there is a small collection of what photographs of Professor Bechamp are available.
CONTENTS
Book One
Pasteur: Plagiarist, Imposter
by R. B. Pearson
Author’s Preface
1. The Prior History of the Germ Theory
2. Béchamp, Pasteur, and Fermentation
3. Vinous Fermentation
4. Béchamp’s Microzymas or ‘little bodies’
5. Silkworm Disease: Another Steal!
6. Pasteur also a Faker: Antisepsis
7. Are Biologicals Injurious?
8. Animal Serology: Anthrax
9. Statistics
10. Real Immunity
Book Two
Béchamp or Pasteur?
A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology
by Ethel Douglas Hume
Author’s Preface
1. Introduction
Part One: The Mystery of Fermentation
2. A Babel of Theories
3. Pasteur’s Memoirs of 1857
4. Béchamp’s ‘Beacon Experiment’
5. Claims and Contradictions
6. The Soluble Ferment
7. Rival Theories and Workers
Part Two: The Microzymas
8. The ‘little bodies’
9. Diseases of Silkworms
10. Laboratory Experiments
11. Nature’s Experiments
12. A Plagiarism Frustrated
13. Microzymas in General
14. Modern Confirmations of Béchamp
Part Three: The Cult of the Microbe
15. The Origin of ‘Preventive Medicine’
16. The International Medical Congress and some Pasteurian Fiascos
17. Hydrophobia
18. A Few Examples of the Cult in Theory and in Practice
19. Some Lessons of World War I and a Few Reflections on World War II
20. The Writing on the Wall
21. Conclusion
LINKS
A short biography of Antoine Béchamp
by Montague R. Leverson,
the translator of the 1912 edition of
The Blood and its Third Element
EXTERNAL LINKS
- The Cause of Disease
- cellsalts.net … believes in Bechamp’s “internal milieu” as the cause of disease, pleomorphism of bacteria, acididoses as being one of the main causes of chronic disease, and cellsalts as being the way to both neutralise acidity and treat many common ailments.
- Antoine Béchamp on Wikipedia
- Honoring Antoine Bechamp:
an interview with Christopher Barr - Unfriendly Organisms







































