Diseases and Cures in the Wings of Houseflies: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
[checked revision][checked revision]
Line 31: Line 31:
{{Quote||… from the perspective of logic, if the fly did not carry some sort of protection in the form of an antidote or immunity, it would perish from its own poisonous burden and there would be no fly left in the world.}}  
{{Quote||… from the perspective of logic, if the fly did not carry some sort of protection in the form of an antidote or immunity, it would perish from its own poisonous burden and there would be no fly left in the world.}}  


As far as we know, flies do not succumb to human pathogens – they are merely carriers. This shows that those who make these claims do not understand pathogenesis.  
As far as we know, flies do not succumb to human pathogens – they are merely carriers. This shows that those who make these claims do not understand pathogenesis. Flies do not succumb to human diseases.  


''Flies do not succumb to human diseases.'' 
The way it works is like this:


The way it works is like this: fly lands on feces or rotting carcass – gets traces of feces or rotting carcass on itself. Fly lands on human food – drops traces of feces or rotting carcass on human food – fly flies away – human consumes contaminated food and gets sick. Fly continues on with its life.  
*Fly lands on feces or rotting carcass – gets traces of feces or rotting carcass on itself.  
*Fly lands on human food – drops traces of feces or rotting carcass on human food.
*Fly flies away – human consumes contaminated food and gets sick.  
*Fly continues on with its life, free to repeat the cycle again.  


C. They falsely assume relations that do not exist.  
C. They falsely assume relations that do not exist.  
Line 41: Line 44:
{{Quote||The existence of similar bacteria-killing mechanisms in two bacteriophages suggests that antibiotics for human infections might be designed on the basis of these cell wall-destroying proteins. Science 292 (June 2001) p. 2326-2329.}}
{{Quote||The existence of similar bacteria-killing mechanisms in two bacteriophages suggests that antibiotics for human infections might be designed on the basis of these cell wall-destroying proteins. Science 292 (June 2001) p. 2326-2329.}}


The ability to design antibiotics that might utilize bacteriophage infection pathways does not prove that phages are antidotal to bacteria. Antibiotics are not phages. Further, these antibiotics are likely to be ‘artificial’ and do not reflect the natural state of fly-human disease interactions.  
The ability to design antibiotics that might utilize bacteriophage infection pathways does not prove that phages are antidotal to bacteria. Antibiotics are not phages. Further, these antibiotics are likely to be ‘artificial’ and do not reflect the natural state of fly-human disease interactions.


===They make patently erroneous statements===
===They make patently erroneous statements===
48,466

edits

Navigation menu