Robert Koch — "I have worked like a man possessed, but not for fame or money."
I have worked like a man possessed, but not for fame or money.
I have worked like a man possessed, but not for fame or money.
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"It was a great moment when I first saw the tubercle bacilli under the microscope."
"It is a great responsibility to be a physician, for upon us depends the health of the community."
"The fight against infectious diseases is the most important task of medicine."
"The fight against infectious diseases is a global concern."
"The scientific community must work together to address the global challenges of infectious diseases."
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Intense dedication can exist entirely apart from self-interest. Koch describes work so consuming it becomes possession — yet driven by something deeper than ego or money. He separates intrinsic motivation from external reward; the labor itself was the point. In modern terms: not grinding for recognition or a paycheck, but pulled forward by the problem itself, unable to stop even if he wanted to — purpose as the only fuel.
Koch identified the tuberculosis bacterium in 1882, working alone in a cramped Berlin lab with improvised equipment. Before his breakthrough he was an obscure rural physician in Wollstein, conducting experiments on a bench in his consulting room with no salary or grant funding for that research. His Nobel Prize came in 1905 — decades after the obsessive solitary work that defined him. The reward eventually followed, but his career makes clear it was never the reason.
Koch worked during the bacteriology revolution of the 1870s–1890s, when germ theory was overturning centuries of miasma belief against fierce resistance. Tuberculosis killed one in seven Europeans. German and French science competed bitterly — Koch versus Pasteur was the era's defining rivalry. Scientific celebrity was emerging and researchers were becoming public figures, yet the field remained poorly funded and demanded personal sacrifice. His disavowal of fame and money was both a personal conviction and a practical reality of the period.
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