Vaccines: Mythology, Ideology, and Reality by John Leake, Peter A. McCullough
English | July 29th, 2025 | ISBN: 1648211895 | 240 pages | True EPUB | 1.36 MB
English | July 29th, 2025 | ISBN: 1648211895 | 240 pages | True EPUB | 1.36 MB
The word "vaccine" derives from the Latin word for cow. The English physician, Edward Jenner, coined it in his 1798 pamphlet An Inquiry into the Causes and Effects of the Variolae Vaccinae. The last two Latin words mean "Smallpox of the Cow," or cowpox. Jenner postulated that cowpox causes mild disease in humans while protecting them from the more dangerous smallpox. His proposal for inoculation with a weak form of disease-causing matter to prevent serious illness became the central concept of infectious disease medicine and has remained so ever since. The word "vaccine" was subsequently applied to immunizations against all infectious diseases. Its etymology is amazingly apt, because vaccines are the ultimate sacred cow.