History of penicillin: Beyond heroes, a social construction

The scientific breakthroug we know as “penicillin”, has been traditionally considered as the result of the genius of Alexander Fleming, awarded with the Nobel Prize for the discovery of the “miracle drug”. Standing aside from this popular idea, it is important to highlight the development of penicil...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nicolás Giraldo-Hoyos
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Antioquia 2021-04-01
Series:Iatreia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.udea.edu.co/index.php/iatreia/article/view/341742/20803928
Description
Summary:The scientific breakthroug we know as “penicillin”, has been traditionally considered as the result of the genius of Alexander Fleming, awarded with the Nobel Prize for the discovery of the “miracle drug”. Standing aside from this popular idea, it is important to highlight the development of penicillin as a social construct and the product of the invaluable work of several scientists, in addition to an exceptional social framework that raised the political desire and the pharmaceutical industry support; without any of these, penicillin wouldn’t even have the meaning it has today, or it wouldn’t even exist. The epistemological concepts of “style of thinking” and “collectivity of thought” as basis in the construction of knowledge, present in Ludwick Fleck’s epistemological work, support the conclusion, based the historical account, about the need of standing aside from the idea of penicillin as the discovery of a single hero, and considering it a social construction instead, and a classical example of serendipity. Other aspects less known about penicillin history, such as the use of crude penicillin by general practitioners, or the seeking of information about how to produce it during World War II, which are addressed in this brief historical account.
ISSN:0121-0793
2011-7965