How are diseases born? What is at the center of the Earth? What is fire? Throughout history, man has tried to explain the world to himself… and he has often been wrong.
Le Figaro
tells you about some of the trial and error that made science.
Shortly after the invention of the microscope, European naturalists took hold of the instrument to observe living things and forged theories of reproduction which, today, can make you smile.
"That doesn't mean our predecessors were stupid!"
, warns Matthew Cobb, a biologist at the University of Manchester.
It is necessary
"to place these discoveries in the context and the theories of the time and not to judge retrospectively"
, insists Stéphane Tirard, professor of epistemology at Nantes University.
To read also
Miasma, these pestilences from which epidemics were born
In 1677, the observation of spermatozoa, qualified as “animalcules”, was reported for the first time by Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek, from a family of Dutch drapers.
Inspired by a medical student…
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