A thought experiment:
If the billions of people throughout the ages who have died from pandemics could rise from their graves and live now, what would their attitudes be towards getting vaccinated?
IMO those of us alive in the 20th and 21st centuries are the beneficiaries of the doctors and scientists who came before us, and enabled us to live longer than anyone could have expected in times past.
I think of the incremental discoveries made by the brilliant people who came before us, leading us to live in a time and place when we know so much more about disease and how to prevent or cure at least many of them.
When Jenner figured out that the cow maids were not developing smallpox because they’d had the less deadly cowpox, and he invented a vaccine (from the word for cow) from their pustules that protected the recipients from smallpox. When Lister determined that sterilization of surgical instruments, as well as getting doctors to wash their hands, would end the massive death rate that surgery caused due to bacterial infection. When John Snow observed that Londoners who lived near the Broad Street pump were dying of cholera at greater rates than others, and realized the water was actually killing them, he had the authorities break the pump handle and went on to prove that there were these things called “germs” that no one could see. When Alexander Fleming accidentally left the lid off a Petri dish and realized the mold spores had killed bacteria, which led to penicillin and all antibiotics. Whomever it was that discovered that malaria and yellow fever were actually being caused by parasites in mosquitos and that quinine could restore health to those who would die otherwise.
If the untold billions who’ve perished due to disease, most never having heard of germs and viruses, with no knowledge of a microscopic world——if they were here right now and knew what we know, would they reject a vaccine that could protect them?
IMO if they were here now and knew what we know, they would fall to their knees in gratitude and then race to protect themselves and their families.
I believe we have a miracle in our grasp.
We are not living in the times of ignorance. During the Black Plague people thought they could catch the buboes just by looking at someone, because they could see that people in contact with others would catch bubonic plague, but they didn’t know how. They didn’t know about hygiene and if they had, they didn’t have easily available soap and water, as we do. They couldn’t have conceived of an “antibiotic” or a “vaccine.”
Of course in many underdeveloped countries, clean water is still a problem. But we who live here and now, how can we be educated and yet so ignorant?
IMO
ETA: Louis Pasteur—-sorry, buddy, didn’t mean to leave you out! And all the others whose names are not coming to mind at the moment, but whose advances have rescued us in so many ways.