Over the years, many doctors, scientists, researchers, and independent thinkers have challenged the foundations of Germ Theory — the belief that microorganisms are the primary cause of disease. While these perspectives are controversial today, the objections are rooted in historical experiments, laboratory methodology, questions surrounding virology, and observations about the body’s internal condition, or “terrain.”

For many people, the conversation begins with concerns about vaccines, pharmaceutical influence, or medical transparency. But eventually, some begin asking deeper questions about whether modern medicine may be built upon assumptions that deserve greater scientific scrutiny and open debate. Critics of Germ Theory often argue that toxicity (toxemia), nutrition, environmental stress, and the condition of the body itself play a much larger role in disease than mainstream medicine acknowledges.

Below is a collection of books, writings, and resources that explore the Germ Theory debate, Terrain Theory, virology, contagion, and the historical scientific disagreements that have continued for more than a century. Whether one agrees with these perspectives or not, these authors present very sound arguments that deserve to be examined.

Bechamp or Pasteur by Ethel Hume

Good bye Germ Theory by William P. Trebing

Virus Mania by Torsten Engelbrecht

What really makes you ill? by Dawn Lester

Awakening Our Self-Healing Body by Arthur M. Baker, M.A.

These two books are currently not available on Amazon, but you can always check ebay or other used book stores.

The Invisible Enemy by Gregory Garrett

ShotsofTruth.com is also a site worth checking out.

The Contagion Myth by Thomas S. Cowan

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