Yes; modern doctors do know exactly what causes cancer, and it's not germs, as Rowbotham believed.
Please read the quote you posted. This is an incorrect restatement. The quote says that the nervous system can be degraded by germs, as well as by "causes other than germs". The quote is speaking of the nervous system in the role of disease, and not specifically cancer, and states that it is also degraded by causes other than germs. Your statement is incorrect.
Firstly Tom, thank you for your detailed response.
Rowbotham specifically mentioned cancer as being caused by "germs". Nowhere did he mention gene mutation
as the real and actual cause.
In the mid-1800s, neuroscience, and the human central nervous system (CNS) and peripheral nervous
system (PNS) were not well understood, and certainly not by any lay person such as Rowbotham It wasn't
until the late 1890s that the brain's neural system was discovered and confirmed to function—as we know it
does today—by Santiago Ramón y Cajal (the so called "neuron doctrine").
Cancer is caused by gene mutations to the DNA within cells. The DNA inside a cell is packaged into a large
number of individual genes, each of which contains a set of instructions telling the cell what functions to
perform, as well as how to grow and divide. Errors in these instructions can cause the cell to stop its normal
function, and can allow the cell to become cancerous. A number of things can cause gene mutations, such
as smoking, radiation, carcinogens, hormone imbalance, or chronic tissue inflammation.
A nice story, but they don't know what is occurring on a biochemical level and how everything interacts with each other, and how those environmental effects which were identified affects the bodily system in all its pathways and ends up turning into cancer. Cancer research and research of possible in vivo remedies are still ongoing.
Yes we do know what cause cancers at a biochemical level; that's how we now know to use radiation and/or
chemotherapy to cure the majority of cases. You've claimed that, currently, "60% of cancer patients, die
within five years". That's debatable, at least here in Australia; according to the National Cancer Control
Indicators,the
10-year survival was highest for prostate cancer (91%), melanoma (87%) and female breast
cancer (85%). The lowest 10-year survival rate was for pancreatic cancer (8%).
It is seen that smoking and radiation could also degrade the nervous system as well.
Immaterial and irrelevant in Rowbotham's lifetime. In the mid-1800s nobody believed that smoking could or
would produce illnesses of any sort, and it wasn't until 1896 that French physicist Henri Becquerel discovered
radioactivity, 12 years after Rowbotham's death.
And as a former cancer sufferer (more than 30 years ago) I can assure that doctors do know how to eradicate it.
You can't possibly think that surgery, radiation therapy and chemo are cures or preventatives for cancer, as I indicated were lacking.
Well, actually I do; I'm living proof after 33 years. I underwent surgery, and extensive radiation therapy.
Tellingly, in Rowbotham's day, cancer killed everybody who developed it, and he couldn't do anything about it
other than selling his elixir. Nor could doctors even diagnose it back then.
This is incorrect as well. https://web.archive.org/web/20150310060321/http://thomlatimercares.org/Cancer_Facts.htm
No, it's not incorrect. Could you please post a citation supporting your claim. And your link is 25 years out of date!
Modern medicine and its trillions of dollars have added a whopping 15% survival rate,
and this is ignoring the many people who regress years later. How great is modern oncology at fighting cancer, really?
Could you please post links to support those claims I've highlighted? And it's patently obvious that modern medicine
has advanced cancer (and other life-threatening illnesses) diagnoses and treatments way, way beyond Rowbotham's era.
See, this is the main problem for all of these muh science sentiments in general. In your OP you declare modern science to have created "massive advances" when this could be abjectly false. You are appealing to popular lore and dogma, without actually bothering to show the claims from first principles.
Can you please clarify what you mean by "popular lore and dogma" and also "first principles"? And yes, my claim
about scientific advancements since Rowbotham's lifetime
have, undoubtedly, been massive. In his day, the
best he could come up with as any sort of cure was nothing more than sugar, water and alcohol.
He was named in numerous cases of wrongful deaths, including a "death by misadventure" for accidentally poisoning
one of his own children. He was also held responsible for several other deaths using his quack cures of phosphorus.