History of Microbiology
Ever wondered what caused the major shift in how we understand diseases? It all started with the invention of the microscope in the 17th century. Anton van Leeuwenhoek created powerful lenses that revealed an invisible world teeming with life. His detailed observations and illustrations of bacteria and protozoa opened the door to a new scientific frontier.
Before microscopes, people believed in spontaneous generation - the idea that living organisms could spontaneously arise from non-living matter (imagine thinking maggots just appeared from nowhere in meat!). Scientists like Francesco Redi began challenging this notion through experiments, but it was Louis Pasteur who delivered the knockout punch.
Pasteur's famous swan-necked flask experiments proved microorganisms came from other microorganisms, not from thin air. This revolutionary work established the foundation for the germ theory of disease - the understanding that tiny microbes cause specific illnesses. Robert Koch built upon this theory by developing a systematic approach (Koch's postulates) to prove which specific microorganism causes which specific disease.
Did you know? Before germ theory, doctors would often move directly from dissecting corpses to delivering babies without washing their hands - no wonder infection rates were so high! Pasteur's discoveries quite literally saved millions of lives.