Author: ATTENBOROUGH, FREDERICK THOMAS
Title: “To Rid Oneself of the Uninvited Guestâ€: Robert Koch, Sergei Winogradsky and Competing Styles of Practice in Medical Microbiology Cord-id: jovnauwf Document date: 2011_11_14
ID: jovnauwf
Snippet: Does an infectious disease have one, singular pathogenic cause, or many interacting causes? In the discipline of medical microbiology, there is no definitive theoretical answer to this question: there, the conditions of aetiological possibility exist in a curious tension. Ever since the late 19(th) century, the “germ theory of diseaseâ€â€““one disease, one causeâ€â€“ has coâ€existed with a much less well known theory of “multifactoralityâ€â€““one disease, many interacting causesâ€.
Document: Does an infectious disease have one, singular pathogenic cause, or many interacting causes? In the discipline of medical microbiology, there is no definitive theoretical answer to this question: there, the conditions of aetiological possibility exist in a curious tension. Ever since the late 19(th) century, the “germ theory of diseaseâ€â€““one disease, one causeâ€â€“ has coâ€existed with a much less well known theory of “multifactoralityâ€â€““one disease, many interacting causesâ€. And yet, in practice, it is always a singular and never a multifactorial aetiology that emerges once the pathogenic world is brought into the field of medical perception. This paper seeks to understand why. Performing a detailed, genealogical reading of the 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak, it foregrounds a set of links that connect the practical diagnostic tools at work within contemporary, 21(st) century laboratories to the philosophical assumptions at work within lateâ€19(th) century understandings of the “germ theory of diseaseâ€.
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