The 1906 complement-fixation test for syphilis whose institutional stabilizationFleck traced as the archetype of how unreliable knowledge becomes settled fact through collective investment rather than technical improvement.
August von Wassermann developed his complement-fixation test for syphilis in 1906. Fleck's reconstruction of its history is one of the most devastating case studies in the philosophy of science. The Wassermann reaction did not work in the way a modern reader would assume. It was not a clean detector of the presence or absence of Treponema pallidum. It produced ambiguous results, required considerable interpretive skill, and generated false positives and false negatives at rates that would be considered unacceptable by contemporary standards. It became the standard diagnostic test not because it was objectively reliable — Fleck demonstrated it was not — but because a thought collective formed around it, developed interpretive protocols for its use, invested institutional resources in its infrastructure, and gradually standardized the reading of its results until the ambiguities were resolved not by improving the test but by stabilizing the framework within which its results were read.