Bechamp and Pasteur were rival scientists who disagreed about the nature of health.
Louis Pasteur's most significant contributions to modern medicine include his development of the germ theory of disease, the process of pasteurization, and the creation of vaccines for rabies and anthrax. These breakthroughs revolutionized disease prevention and treatment and laid the foundation for modern immunology.
Bechamp is best known for terrain theory, much more akin to the microbiome theories of health that have gained an increasing amount of traction in current years. He essentially understood the balance of and the importance of the environments we create with foods that our internal systems either support or don't support disease. Béchamp challenged Pasteur's germ theory, arguing that bacteria do not cause disease independently but rather emerge from the breakdown of host tissue under unfavorable conditions.
In this short episode, Deb touches upon how she stumbled across the work of this very under-represented scientific pioneer, and how we can have more agency by including his point of view as part of our design thinking.