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![]() Consider Alexander Fleming and his discovery of perhaps the world’s most important medical advancement: Penicillin. By all accounts, Fleming was a slob. He discovered Penicillin because he was so slovenly that some of his Petri dishes had developed a fungus - like so many leftovers in a bachelor’s refrigerator – and thanks to the idleness afforded him by researching grants he was able to discern value in this. Of course he couldn’t even manufacture a stable and useful strain of the bacteria. Instead it was the U.S. and British governments that realized this advancement. As a capitalist, Fleming was a failure. Jonas Salk, another of the faces on the Mount Rushmore of medicine, was an academic working at a university with government research money readily available as a result of mass polio terror. He successfully found a vaccine and promptly proceeded to refuse to patent his discovery so that it would benefit society as thoroughly and widely as possible. As a capitalist, he was no Andrew Carnegie. Louis Pasteur, whose contributions to society’s health were as fearless as they were extensive, might well have made a great capitalist. He was bold, and precise. Had he chosen to make mousetraps I am quite sure it would have brought mice to the brink of extinction. I would posit that his choice not to put his formidable intellect to work amassing wealth for himself speaks volumes about an intellectual’s relationship to riches. It is not in society’s interest to compel every man to run the rat race. To casually accept that only supply and demand – only greed – can motivate the great evolutions in our history is to call Pasteur a fool and a fraud. Briefly, consider what market driven medicine has brought mankind: Snake oil, heroin and The Purple Pill (ask your doctor about The Purple Pill). Oh, and of course Ritalin and Xanax. Where would society be without the off label uses of these capitalist ventures? Ultimately, we must stop hailing successful capitalists as the standard-bearers of human advancement. There are the Henry Fords and the Bill Gateses, but there are also the Philip Morrises and the P.T. Barnums. More importantly there are the pioneers whose lives paid little or no heed to capitalizing and it is their names that have contributed to the history of health care in such a way that we now consider it reasonable to contemplate a society where patient X doesn’t necessarily deserve to be treated for his sickness. After all, it isn’t Polio, or Smallpox or Typhoid they can’t afford to treat, is it? From KOS |
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