Science 101- an experiment without controls is worthless. Example: Take one banana, spit on it, set it in sun for 10 days, examine now rotted banana, then announce spit causes bananas to rot. Not buying it? That's what virologists do, no controls. Now the proper experiment with controls: Take 2 bananas, spit on one, set them both in sun …
Science 101- an experiment without controls is worthless. Example: Take one banana, spit on it, set it in sun for 10 days, examine now rotted banana, then announce spit causes bananas to rot. Not buying it? That's what virologists do, no controls. Now the proper experiment with controls: Take 2 bananas, spit on one, set them both in sun for 10 days, both rot, therefore spit cannot be said to cause bananas to rot. That's the entire "Have viruses been proven to exist?" argument- it's not complicated.
Actually, John F. Enders, in his 1954 publication, The cultivation of the poliomyelitis viruses in
tissue culture, which contains the cytopathic effect (CPE) procedure now widely used by virologists to "prove" a virus, did proper treated and untreated controls, stating in the paper, "it was evident that the cytopathogenic effect of the virus could be directly and easily observed in the untreated culture." In other words, cells died (bananas rotted) whether he "spit on them" or not, therefore disproving spit as the cause of cell death. Yet, the world was shut down based on claim of having spit on one banana.
Science 101- an experiment without controls is worthless. Example: Take one banana, spit on it, set it in sun for 10 days, examine now rotted banana, then announce spit causes bananas to rot. Not buying it? That's what virologists do, no controls. Now the proper experiment with controls: Take 2 bananas, spit on one, set them both in sun for 10 days, both rot, therefore spit cannot be said to cause bananas to rot. That's the entire "Have viruses been proven to exist?" argument- it's not complicated.
Actually, John F. Enders, in his 1954 publication, The cultivation of the poliomyelitis viruses in
tissue culture, which contains the cytopathic effect (CPE) procedure now widely used by virologists to "prove" a virus, did proper treated and untreated controls, stating in the paper, "it was evident that the cytopathogenic effect of the virus could be directly and easily observed in the untreated culture." In other words, cells died (bananas rotted) whether he "spit on them" or not, therefore disproving spit as the cause of cell death. Yet, the world was shut down based on claim of having spit on one banana.