You On AI Field Guide · The Lille Fermentation Observation The You On AI Field Guide Home
Txt Low Med High
EVENT

The Lille Fermentation Observation

The 1856 moment when Pasteur examined souring beet-sugar vats and recognized living organisms as causal agents where every other chemist saw chemical contamination.
In 1856, a Lille manufacturer of beet-sugar alcohol presented Pasteur with a commercial problem: fermentation vats were souring, producing lactic acid instead of ethanol. The expected response was chemical analysis within the framework of Justus von Liebig — the most influential European chemist, whose theory held fermentation was purely chemical decomposition with living organisms as incidental passengers. Pasteur examined healthy and diseased vats under the microscope. Healthy vats contained yeast globules; diseased vats contained rod-shaped organisms associated with a grey deposit. The organisms had been there for anyone to see. What Pasteur possessed was a perceptual apparatus calibrated by a decade of crystallographic work to detect structural differences at the microscopic level — a capacity the chemical tradition had never cultivated. He recognized the organisms as agents, not passengers. The observation would become the foundation of the germ theory of disease.

In The You On AI Field Guide

The near-miss is the part of the story that carries the heaviest weight. Pasteur almost discarded the observation. He was trained as a chemist;

← Home 0%
EVENT Book →

Keep reading with YOU ON AI

Unlock the full book, 10,000+ field-guide entries, and a 1000+ thinker library. If you have a book code, register now — it takes a minute.

Register with book code Sign in