Prof. Christoph Gradmann (University of Oslo)
Thursday 29th May at 5.30pm
WF38 on the first floor of the Medical School
College of Medical and Dental Sciences
School of Health and Population Sciences
HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND HEALTH RESEARCH SEMINAR SUMMER TERM 2014
This lecture is on the historical origins and the popularity of 'Koch's Postulates', as set of criteria for establishing a bacterial aetiology of an infectious disease supposedly established by the German physician Robert Koch (1843-1910).
These postulates and their three steps of isolation, cultivation and inoculation are a classic in medical history and they are frequently invoked in medical research papers. Yet, strict adherence to them is rarely to be found – not even in Koch himself. He produced numerous variations of the methodology and usually avoided discussing principal questions anyway. Given that, it is not surprising that references to Koch's postulates in the 20th century usually refer to the spirit rather than the literal meaning of the postulates. There are innumerable variations of those postulates. For example, proponents of virology or molecular medicine devised variations of Koch's postulates that serve to relate their own work to classical bacteriology. The nature of such references is anecdotal: referring to a historical event that has never happened in a strict sense, they produce ex traditione credentials for experimental medicine.
ALL ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND
Details of future seminars are available from: Dr Vanessa Heggie, History of Medicine Unit, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT.
Email: v.heggie@bham.ac.uk Tel: 0121 415 8184
School of Health and Population Sciences
HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND HEALTH RESEARCH SEMINAR SUMMER TERM 2014
This lecture is on the historical origins and the popularity of 'Koch's Postulates', as set of criteria for establishing a bacterial aetiology of an infectious disease supposedly established by the German physician Robert Koch (1843-1910).
These postulates and their three steps of isolation, cultivation and inoculation are a classic in medical history and they are frequently invoked in medical research papers. Yet, strict adherence to them is rarely to be found – not even in Koch himself. He produced numerous variations of the methodology and usually avoided discussing principal questions anyway. Given that, it is not surprising that references to Koch's postulates in the 20th century usually refer to the spirit rather than the literal meaning of the postulates. There are innumerable variations of those postulates. For example, proponents of virology or molecular medicine devised variations of Koch's postulates that serve to relate their own work to classical bacteriology. The nature of such references is anecdotal: referring to a historical event that has never happened in a strict sense, they produce ex traditione credentials for experimental medicine.
ALL ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND
Details of future seminars are available from: Dr Vanessa Heggie, History of Medicine Unit, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT.
Email: v.heggie@bham.ac.uk Tel: 0121 415 8184
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