Koch’s postulates were never intended to be applied to viruses, only to bacteria, therefore they are simply not applicable to research into viral pathogens, a fact that even Koch himself was adamant about on the record.There is no evidence whatsoever to back the “viruses don’t exist” model. The idea of the “non-existence” of viruses and germs is a non-sequitur (non-starter), even and especially according to the sources provided to prove the fact.This loose paradigm is most often an attribution based off of a non-scientific, faith-based debate between germ theory and terrain theory.Īfter a deep dive into the subject, giving all neutrality and fairness to both sides of the apparent debate (actually, there was never any real debate, just a carefully crafted false dialectic), here is a summary of my conclusions, as shown and detailed in triplicate within the bulk of this research project: ![]()
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