Louis Pasteur and Evolutionist Revisionism

Something that bears repeating is that if minerals-to-misotheist evolution were true, there would be no need for data tampering, fraud, and more. Some sidewinders are so determined to hoodwink us into believing fake science, they are attempting to rewrite history. Consider Louis Pasteur.

Pasteur destroyed the concept of abiogenesis and opposed evolution, and revisionists have been attempting to change the truth of history.
Louis Pasteur by Albert Edelfelt, 1885

Louis Pasteur discovered a vaccine for anthrax that was used successfully in 1881 —

"Never mind that stuff, Cowboy Bob! Here comes Mongo!"

Give him a box of candy so we can get back to it.

Pasteur had a creation worldview and opposed Darwinism. His views fly in the face of the concept that someone must believe in evolution to be a scientist. (Indeed, we have seen many times that creation scientists past and present have refuted that hoary canard.) He believed creation which influenced his numerous achievements for the betterment of humanity.

Shortly after Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859, Pasteur began to challenge the idea of spontaneous generation—the foundation of the evolutionary view on the origin of life. Pasteur’s simple but elegant swan-necked flask experiments not only put to rest the organic life-from-non-life idea but also set the foundation for the law of biogenesis: life only comes from life. . . .

Pasteur had the uncanny ability to combine theoretical, operational, and applied science—the mark of a truly gifted scientist. Pasteur understood the variability of microbes and how he could apply this principle in vaccine preparation. . . . His understanding of this natural variation was also successfully applied in developing vaccines for chicken cholera and rabies.

Although his scientific pronouncements were sometimes abrasive to his fellow scientists, he remained firm in his convictions, borne from painstaking research. Pasteur had a strong religious and humanitarian spirit. He firmly believed in God, as the Creator of all living things. From his knowledge of the Gospels, he wanted to benefit mankind by having his ideas used to “heal the sick.”

To read the entire article (lengthy, but very interesting and useful), see "Louis Pasteur’s Views on Creation, Evolution, and the Genesis of Germs".