Robert Koch — "I have always believed in the power of observation and experimentation."
I have always believed in the power of observation and experimentation.
I have always believed in the power of observation and experimentation.
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"The ultimate goal of all research must be the prevention of disease."
"The experimental method is the foundation of all scientific progress."
"The scientific method is the only way to uncover the secrets of nature."
"I have no other aim than to advance science and to contribute to the welfare of mankind."
"The most important thing in scientific research is to observe carefully and think clearly."
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Genuine understanding comes only through direct evidence — watching what actually happens and testing hypotheses under controlled conditions. This is the core of the scientific method: reject assumptions, demand proof, let reality speak. In an era when medical opinion often substituted for fact, Koch's commitment meant that explanations for disease had to be earned through repeatable experiment, not inherited from tradition or reasoned from armchair speculation.
Koch built the entire science of medical bacteriology on exactly this principle. He developed Koch's Postulates — a strict experimental checklist proving that a specific microbe causes a specific disease — demanding reproducible laboratory proof before any claim was accepted. His 1882 identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis required months of painstaking microscopic observation, novel staining techniques, and animal experiments. Every breakthrough he achieved was rooted in patient, disciplined looking before concluding.
In the 1870s–1890s, infectious disease killed millions while physicians still debated whether miasma — bad air — or invisible organisms caused illness. Germ theory was contested, not consensus. Tuberculosis alone killed roughly one in seven Europeans. Koch worked as lab techniques, microscopes, and bacterial staining methods rapidly improved, creating the first tools capable of revealing the microbial world. Rigorous observation and experiment weren't just philosophical preferences — they were humanity's only path out of epidemics.
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