Louis Pasteur — "The more progress physical sciences make, the more they give us cause to believe…"
The more progress physical sciences make, the more they give us cause to believe that all phenomena are reducible to molecular forces.
The more progress physical sciences make, the more they give us cause to believe that all phenomena are reducible to molecular forces.
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"The greatest victory is that over oneself."
"The role of the infinitely small in nature is infinitely large."
"It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change."
"The scientific method is the only one that allows us to approach the truth."
"When I approach a child, he inspires in me two sentiments: tenderness for what he is, and respect for what he may become."
Attributed, reflecting his mechanistic view of nature.
Date: Late 19th Century (approx.)
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As science advances, we keep discovering that everything around us, from life to disease to chemistry, can ultimately be explained by interactions happening at the tiniest scale between molecules. What looks mysterious or complex on the surface turns out to be the result of small physical and chemical forces acting in predictable ways. The deeper we look, the more the universe seems built from these microscopic building blocks working together.
Pasteur spent his career proving invisible microscopic agents shaped visible outcomes, whether souring milk, fermenting wine, or causing rabies. His work on germ theory and pasteurization depended on the conviction that molecular-scale causes drive large-scale phenomena. As a trained chemist who pivoted to biology, he repeatedly showed that crystal structure, fermentation, and infection all came back to tiny particles, making this belief the foundation of his life's research.
Pasteur worked during the 1800s scientific revolution, when chemistry, physics, and biology were rapidly merging. Atomic theory was gaining traction, the microscope was revealing new worlds, and researchers like Maxwell and Mendeleev were mapping molecular and elemental behavior. Disease was still widely blamed on bad air or spontaneous generation. Pasteur's era was the moment science began replacing mysticism with measurable, molecular explanations, setting the stage for modern medicine and microbiology.
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