by Professor Antoine Bechamp
ISBN 0-9579858-7-8 228 pages, $15.95
READ AN EXTRACT ONLINE
Available from: AMAZON US | AMAZON UK | ABEBOOKS | BORDERS UK
This book is the last work by Professor Antoine Béchamp, a man who should, by rights, be regarded today as one of the founders of modern medicine and biology.
During his long career as an academic and researcher in nineteenth century France, Béchamp was widely known and respected as both a teacher and a researcher. As a leading academic, his work was well documented in scientific circles.
Few made as much use of this fact as Louis Pasteur, who based much of his career on plagiarising and distorting Béchamp’s research; in doing so, Pasteur secured for himself an undeserved place in the history of medical science.
The Blood and its Third Element is Béchamp’s explanation of his position, and his defense of it against Pasteur’s mischief. This final major work of Béchamp’s embodies the culmination of his life’s research. This book contains, in detail, the elements of the microzymian theory of the organization of living organisms and organic materials. It has immediate and far reaching relevance to the fields of immunology, bacteriology, and cellular biology; and it shows that more than 100 years ago, the germ, or microbian, theory of disease was demonstrated by Béchamp to be without foundation.
There is no single cause of disease. The ancients thought this, and Béchamp proved it and was written out of history for his trouble. The relevance of his work to the dilemmas that plague modern medical science remains as yet unrealized.
CONTENTS
Publisher’s Preface
Translator’s Preface
Author’s Preface / 1
Author’s Preface / 2
Introductory and Historical
Chapter One — On the nature of fibrin isolated from the clot or obtained by whipping the blood. — The blood fibrin. — Fibrinous microzymas. — Fibrin and oxygenated water. — The ferment of fibrin.
Chapter Two — On the actual specific individuality of the albuminoid proximate principles. — The albuminoids. — Coagulation. — The albuminoids of the fibrin. — The albuminoids of the serum. — Haemoglobin. Haemoglobin and oxygenated water.
Chapter Three — The state of the fibrin in the blood at the moment of venesection. — The fibrin without microzymas. — The haematic microzymian molecular granulations.
Chapter Four — The real structure of the red blood globule. — The microzymas of the blood globules. — The blood globules in general.
Chapter Five — The real nature of the blood at the moment of bleeding. — The living parts of the blood protoplasm. — The unchangeable character of mixtures of proximate principles. — The vitellin microzymas and the blood globules. — The vascular system.
Chapter Six — The real chemical, anatomical and physiological meaning of the coagulation of the shed blood. — Coagulation of the blood. — The blood of the horse. — The serum of the blood. — Coagulation of blood diluted with water. — Second phase of the spontaneous alteration of the blood in calcined air. — Oxygen has no share in the destruction of the globules in the defibrinated blood. — Spontaneous alteration of flesh. Spontaneous alteration of milk. — Fermentation of the egg. — Spontaneous destruction of the cellule of yeast. — Spontaneous destruction of tissues. — Spontaneous alteration of the blood.
Chapter Seven — The blood is a flowing tissue and therefore spontaneously alterable. — Pasteur and the germs of the air. — Robin and the alteration of the blood. — Microzymas and spores of schizomycetes. — Microzymas and micrococcus. — The microzymas and the circulatory system. — Comparison of the microzymas of the blood, the circulatory system, and other tissues. — Autonomy of the microzymas.
Chapter Eight — The microzymas and bacteriology. — Ovular and vitellin microzymas. — Microzymas and molecular granulations. — Geological microzymas. — Biological characteristics of microzymas. — Microzymas and their perennity. — Microzymas and pathology. Phagocytosis. — Microzymas and anthrax. Microzymas and disease. — Microzymas and microbes. — Microzymas and the individual coefficient. — Microzymas, life and death. — Microzymas, blood and protoplasm. Conclusions.
LINKS and ARTICLES
An example of Bechamp’s science
A detailed example of Bechamp’s work and science.
Second Thoughts on Disease
A Controversy and Bechamp Revisited by Drs Kalokerinos & Dettman ©1977.
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.
A short biography of Antoine Béchamp by Montague R. Leverson, the translator of the 1912 edition of The Blood and its Third Element
The Dream and Lie of Louis Pasteur by R. Pearson This is the complete text that makes up the first part of Pasteur or Bechamp?
To be or not to be? 150 Years of Hidden Knowledge by Christopher Bird 1991 Nexus Magazine April 1992
Philippa Uwins and Nanobacteria

Radio Interview with Philippa Unwins
PDF of the Dr Uwin’s original research paper published in the American Mineralogist
EXTERNAL LINKS
- The Cause of Disease
- Antoine Béchamp on Wikipedia
- Honoring Antoine Bechamp: an interview with Christopher Barr
- Unfriendly Organisms
- Are nanobacteria making us ill?
- Nanobacteria on Wikipedia
- Nanobes on Wikipedia
- Nanobacteria revelations provoke new controversy
- How Small Can Life Be?







































