📖 Overview
Good-Bye Germ Theory presents a controversial challenge to mainstream medical theories about disease and immunity. Dr. William P. Trebing argues against widely accepted germ theory and vaccination practices.
The book examines historical medical records and scientific studies to build a case for alternative views on health and disease causation. Trebing questions established medical protocols and presents his perspective on natural immunity and healing.
The text includes discussions of specific diseases, medical procedures, and public health policies. The author provides documentation and research citations to support his positions.
This work stands as a dissenting voice in modern medical discourse, advocating for individual health sovereignty and questioning institutional medical practices. The book represents broader debates about medical authority versus personal choice in healthcare decisions.
👀 Reviews
Readers report that this book promotes anti-vaccination views and challenges mainstream germ theory. Most reviews come from people who either strongly agree or disagree with the book's stance.
Positive reviews note:
- Research citations and historical references
- Questions about vaccination safety
- Alternative views on disease causation
Critical reviews focus on:
- Lack of peer-reviewed evidence
- Misrepresentation of medical facts
- Dangerous health recommendations
Several medical professionals in reviews warn that following the book's advice could lead to serious health consequences. Multiple readers point out factual errors regarding vaccine history and immunology.
Ratings:
Amazon: 4.5/5 (116 reviews)
Goodreads: 4.3/5 (23 reviews)
Review quotes:
"Dangerous misinformation dressed up as research" - Amazon reviewer
"Opened my eyes to vaccination risks" - Goodreads reviewer
"Author lacks credentials to make medical claims" - Barnes & Noble reviewer
The book appears to have a small but dedicated following among alternative health communities.
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What Really Makes You Ill? by Dawn Lester, David Parker This investigation presents alternative explanations for disease causation beyond the germ theory paradigm.
Virus Mania by Torsten Engelbrecht, Claus Köhnlein, Samantha Bailey, and Stefano Scoglio The book examines how the medical industry constructs viral threats and questions the evidence behind virus-based disease models.
The Invisible Rainbow by Arthur Firstenberg Research connects the rise of various illnesses to the historical implementation of electrical technology rather than microorganisms.
The Contagion Myth by Thomas S. Cowan, Sally Fallon Morell The text explores alternative theories about disease transmission and challenges established concepts of viral contagion.
What Really Makes You Ill? by Dawn Lester, David Parker This investigation presents alternative explanations for disease causation beyond the germ theory paradigm.
Virus Mania by Torsten Engelbrecht, Claus Köhnlein, Samantha Bailey, and Stefano Scoglio The book examines how the medical industry constructs viral threats and questions the evidence behind virus-based disease models.
The Invisible Rainbow by Arthur Firstenberg Research connects the rise of various illnesses to the historical implementation of electrical technology rather than microorganisms.
The Contagion Myth by Thomas S. Cowan, Sally Fallon Morell The text explores alternative theories about disease transmission and challenges established concepts of viral contagion.
🤔 Interesting facts
🦠 Despite being a book that challenges germ theory, author William P. Trebing holds a doctorate in chiropractic medicine, not microbiology or epidemiology.
🏥 The book suggests that Louis Pasteur, known as the "father of germ theory," allegedly recanted his theory on his deathbed, though this claim is disputed by mainstream historians.
🔬 The text explores Antoine Béchamp's alternative "terrain theory," which proposes that disease arises from internal conditions rather than external germs - a concept that preceded Pasteur's work.
💉 Published in 2006, the book emerged during a period of growing interest in alternative medicine, coinciding with rising public debate about vaccination policies.
📚 While the book presents itself as a scientific critique, it has been categorized by libraries and bookstores under "alternative medicine" rather than "medical science" due to its stance against established medical consensus.