Harden V A
NIH Historical Office, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Hist Philos Life Sci. 1992;14(2):249-69.
This paper examines the debate over the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as the cause of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) from an historical perspective. The changing criteria for proving the link between putative pathological agents and diseases are discussed, beginning with Robert Koch's research on anthrax in the late nineteenth century. Various versions of 'Koch's postulates' are analyzed in relation to the necessity and sufficiency arguments of logical reasoning. In addition, alterations to Koch's postulates are delineated, specifically those required by the discovery of rickettsiae and viruses in the early twentieth century and by the immunological testing developed after mid-century to demonstrate the links between elusive viral agents and two diseases, hepatitis B and infectious mononucleosis. From this perspective, an examination of the AIDS debate is constructed. Molecular biologist Peter Duesberg's argument that HIV is not the cause of AIDS is analyzed in light of his contention that a version of Koch's postulates has not been satisfied. Additional research findings through 1990 relating to the etiology of AIDS are also noted.
本文从历史角度审视了关于人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)作为获得性免疫缺陷综合征(AIDS,艾滋病)病因的争论。文章讨论了证明假定病原体与疾病之间联系的不断变化的标准,始于19世纪末罗伯特·科赫对炭疽的研究。分析了“科赫法则”的各种版本与逻辑推理中的必要性和充分性论证的关系。此外,还阐述了对科赫法则的修改,特别是20世纪初立克次氏体和病毒的发现以及20世纪中叶后为证明难以捉摸的病毒病原体与两种疾病(乙型肝炎和传染性单核细胞增多症)之间的联系而发展的免疫学检测所要求的修改。从这个角度构建了对艾滋病争论的审视。分子生物学家彼得·迪斯贝格认为HIV不是艾滋病病因的论点,根据他认为科赫法则的一个版本未得到满足的观点进行了分析。还提到了截至1990年与艾滋病病因相关的其他研究发现。