Antoine Bechamp – A Summary

 

Antoine Bechamp
Antoine Bechamp

ANTOINE BECHAMP (1816-1908) was a well-known and widely respected professor, teacher, and researcher. He was an active member of the Academy of Sciences, and gave many presentations there during his long career. He also published many papers, all of which still exist and are available.
     And yet, he has disappeared from history. 
      On the other hand, LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895) is one of the great rock stars of medicine and biology. Of the two – Bechamp or Pasteur – he’s the one you’ve most likely heard of. His is one of the most recognizable names in modern science. Many discoveries and advances in medicine and microbiology are attributed to him, including vaccination and the centrepiece of his science – the germ theory of disease.

 

Louis Pasteur and Antoine Bechamp photographed together in 1886
Louis Pasteur (l) and Antoine Bechamp (r), 1886

Here’s a picture of the two together, taken in 1886.

During their lifetimes, the rivalry between Bechamp and Pasteur was constant, and often bitter. They clashed frequently both in speeches before the Academy, and in papers presented to it. Bechamp repeatedly showed that Pasteur’s ‘findings’ included frequent plagiarizations (and distortions) of Bechamp’s own work.

 

When Bechamp and others objected to the plagiarization, Pasteur set out to use his political clout to destroy Bechamp’s career and reputation. Unfortunately, Pasteur largely succeeded. He was more skilful than Bechamp at playing politics and attending the right functions. He was good at making friends in high circles, and was popular with the Royal Family. Pasteur was an A-lister.

The ideas of the two scientists were fundamentally opposed. While Pasteur argued for what we know call the ‘germ theory’ of disease, Bechamp’s work sought to confirm pleomorphism; the idea that all life is based on the forms that a certain class of organisms take during the various stages of their life-cycles.

This difference is fundamental. Bechamp believed that his work showed the connection between science and religion – the one a search after truth, and the other the effort to live up to individual belief. It is fitting that his book Les Mycrozymas culminates in the acclamation of God as the Supreme Source. Bechamp’s teachings are in direct opposition to the materialistic views of the modern science of the twentieth century.

Despite the dominance of Pasteur’s ‘germ theory’, Bechamp’s tiny ‘microzymas’ have been successfully ‘rediscovered’ several times in the 20th century, for example by ROYAL RIFE using his own revolutionary microscope to observe the particles changing into four different types. Rife handmade all the components of his microscopes, which could have thousands of operational parts.

 

Later, working independently and with a different powerful microscope of his own invention, the French scientist GASTON NAESSENS observed these particles morph into sixteen different forms – including bacterial and fungal – which he called ‘somatids’. The significance of this: what we think of as pathogens are not necessarily “infectious” (or “exogenous”, or from outside), but can be “endogenous” (from within).

 

The German scientist GUNTHER ENDERLEIN (1872-1968) identified the same entities and called them ‘protits’.

 

PHILIPPA UWINS while at the University of Queensland during the 1990s found within samples of sandstone rock entities which she called nanodes. Evidence suggested that they are Bechamp’s microzymas and Naessens’ somatids.

 

Common themes and findings link the work of these researchers. They may use various names for what they’ve found – microzyma, somatid, nanobe, protit – but the reality they describe is consistent.

antoine bechampBéchamp found his microscopic particles and their activites everywhere in nature. They appeared in limestone, apparently deriving from the bodies of ancient shelled creatures. These entities from the limestone still retained their activity; the only factor that stopped them was heat. Using the syllable ‘-zyme’ to indicate that the active principle here was of ‘fermentation’ or activity, he named the tiny objects ‘microzymas’.

What Béchamp talks about is a foundational concept. It describes a model of biology and cell function totally different from that that which forms the basis of most modern science. According to his experiments and observations, the microzymas possess a primary role in sustaining (and terminating) all life.

As Bechamp put it, “Life is the prey of life.” When a creature dies, the microzymas take up the role of breaking it down and returning its elements to nature, where they are then taken up by other life-forms to be re-used. This cycle underpins all of life and material reality. The Indian scientist Jagadis Bose would agree with this, and likely add that it applies to not only organic, but also inorganic matter; but that is another discussion.

Because of this basic incomptability of pleomorphism with the germ-based theory of Pasteur and his followers, Antoine Bechamp has been virtually written out of history. Look for him in any edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica – you won’t find him. Search in vain through most textbooks for his name, or for any mention of his work. He has been ‘unpersoned’ in the most Orwellian sense of the term.

Perhaps one day, Béchamp will be restored to the status he deserves: a medical pioneer far ahead of his time.

BOOKS

THE BLOOD AND ITS THIRD ELEMENT, by Antoine Bechamp, contains both an overview of the pleomorphic theory and detailed accounts of Bechamp’s experiments.

This is a detailed scientific read, but the information in it is valuable. This was Bechamp’s last book, and summarises his life’s work.

Available in paperback and ebook. Full Kindle, Epub and PDF downloads are free to list subscribers.

 

Almost like a scientific detective story, BECHAMP OR PASTEUR? details the conflict between the two scientists. With full references to the proceedings of the French Academy of Sciences.

It is ideal if you wish to understand the significance of Bechamp’s work, and why certain interests would want all mention of it removed from the scientific record.

Available in paperback, hardcover, Kindle and Epub. A full PDF download is free to list subscribers.

 


Free downloads of the Kindle, Epub and PDF versions of Bechamp’s book The Blood and its Third Element, and also a full PDF version of Hume’s Bechamp or Pasteur? are available to subscribers of the Caterpillar Ink mailing list. Subscribe by using the form in the sidebar.


ARTICLES

The following articles are extracts from the books mentioned above. Please take them and repost anywhere you like: all I ask is that you leave any links back here in the article, and give credit to Caterpillar Ink as the source.

Some Statistics

The Cult of the Microbe: The Origin of ‘Preventive Medicine’.

Introductory and Historical Notes

 


“Later researchers like Naessens and Enderlein followed the same line of reasoning and developed their own systems of how these microzymas operate. Although their ideas were never proven false by opposing research, they were generally persecuted by mainstream medicine, which makes sense. Because without an enemy that can be identified and killed, what good is it to develop weapons? And developing weapons, that is, drugs, has been the agenda of the industry set up by Carnegie and Rockefeller even down to the present day, as we shall see. New drugs mean new research funding and government money and the need for prescriptions and for an entire profession to write those prescriptions.” — The Post-Antibiotic Age: Germ Theory by Tim O’Shea

“These microorganisms (germs) feed upon the poisonous material which they find in the sick organism and prepare it for excretion. These tiny organisms are derived from still tinier organisms called microzyma. These microzyma are present in the tissues and blood of all living organisms where they remain normally quiescent and harmless. When the welfare of the human body is threatened by the presence of potentially harmful material, a transmutation takes place. The microzyma changes into a bacterium or virus which immediately goes to work to rid the body of this harmful material. When the bacteria or viruses have completed their task of consuming the harmful material they automatically revert to the microzyma stage”. — Bechamp, in Vaccination The ‘Hidden’ Facts by Ian Sinclair


Bechamp’s academic record

Master of Pharmacy
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Medicine
Professor of Medical Chemistry and Pharmacy at Montpellier
Fellow and Professor of Physics and Toxicology — Strasbourg Higher School of Pharmacy
Professor of Chemistry at Strasbourg
Professor of Biological Chemistry and Dean of Faculty of Medicine of Lille
Chevalier of the Legion of Honour — Commander of the Rose of Brazil etc., etc.