Linus Pauling — "I am convinced that there is no disease that cannot be cured by a proper intake …"
I am convinced that there is no disease that cannot be cured by a proper intake of vitamin C.
I am convinced that there is no disease that cannot be cured by a proper intake of vitamin C.
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"Orthomolecular medicine is the preservation of good health and the treatment of disease by varying the concentrations of substances normally present in the body."
"Science is the search for truth -- it is not a game in which one tries to beat his opponent, to do harm to others."
"I have had a good life, and I am grateful for it. I have done my best to make the world a better place."
"On many questions I have a better understanding of the issues than any politicians."
"The only way to get a good idea is to get a lot of ideas and throw the bad ones away."
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The quote asserts that vitamin C, consumed in sufficient quantities, is a universal cure capable of defeating every human disease. It rejects the idea that any illness is beyond the reach of this single nutrient. The phrase proper intake implies therapeutic mega-doses far exceeding dietary norms. It positions nutrition — not pharmaceuticals or surgery — as the master key to human health and longevity, challenging the entire framework of modern medicine.
Pauling, winner of both the 1954 Nobel Chemistry Prize and 1962 Nobel Peace Prize, was history's most decorated scientist and a fearless contrarian. His mastery of molecular structures led him to believe molecules — including ascorbic acid — could be optimized therapeutically. He consumed 12,000+ mg of vitamin C daily and co-authored Cancer and Vitamin C with surgeon Ewan Cameron. The same audacity that revolutionized chemistry drove him to champion orthomolecular medicine against mainstream scientific rejection.
Pauling advanced this claim primarily through the 1970s and 1990s, when Nixon's 1971 War on Cancer had mobilized billions in research yet delivered few breakthroughs. Public trust in pharmaceutical medicine was eroding amid thalidomide's aftermath and post-Vietnam institutional distrust. The antioxidant hypothesis was ascending, AIDS emerged with no cure, and alternative medicine found eager audiences among people desperate for answers. Pauling's sweeping claim was culturally resonant despite weak clinical trial evidence.
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