Microbiology · 1861

Louis Pasteur

The French chemist who banished the notion of life born from nothing.

1822–1895Dole, 1822Marnes-la-Coquette, 1895

With a flask drawn into a long swan's neck, Pasteur let air reach a sterile broth while the dust it carried did not — and the broth stayed clear. Spontaneous generation, the ancient idea that life arose of itself from decay, was finished.

From this he built the germ theory of disease and the practice that bears his name, pasteurisation, opening the path that Lister and Koch would follow into the war on infection.