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History Unplugged Podcast

Scientists Who Were Ridiculed, Exiled, and Imprisoned for Being Right

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

History, Society & Culture

4.24K Ratings

🗓️ 17 March 2026

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Science progresses through breakthrough discoveries, but behind many of the field's greatest advancements lies a darker history of scientific dysfunction—hostile competition, information hoarding, and criticism that has silenced revolutionary thinkers. From Alexander Gordon being forced to flee Aberdeen after proving doctors spread deadly infections, to Ignaz Semmelweis being fired and exiled for insisting doctors wash their hands between autopsies and deliveries, brilliant scientists have paid devastating personal prices for challenging medical orthodoxies. The pattern repeats across centuries: Pierre Louis was attacked for using statistics to prove bloodletting was useless, Joseph Lister faced ridicule for suggesting "invisible germs" caused infections, and Jean Toussaint suffered a nervous breakdown after Louis Pasteur appropriated his anthrax vaccine discovery. These cautionary tales reveal how the scientific community often becomes so attached to established paradigms that it rejects—or even destroys—those who dare to question consensus, no matter how strong their evidence.

Today's guest is Matt Kaplan, author of “I Told You So!: Scientists Who Were Ridiculed, Exiled, and Imprisoned for Being Right.” He has spent two decades observing dysfunction across all scientific disciplines and now calls for fundamental reform in his book "I Told You So!" He argues that personality and social connections are weighted too heavily over actual ideas and skill, with good scientists losing grants and promotions simply because they lack charisma or fail to make the right political connections. Kaplan explores how even paleontology has its bullies, pointing to cases like Alison Moyer's discovery of organic material in dinosaur bones being met with hostility for challenging established orthodoxies. Through these stories of scientists who were ultimately vindicated—from Gordon's germ theory to Semmelweis's handwashing protocols—we see how science advances faster when contrarians are allowed to have their say and when the community prioritizes rigorous debate over comfortable consensus.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:17.4

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0:18.6

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0:22.4

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0:28.3

or Google Play Store and download it today.

0:35.6

Scott here with another episode of the History Unployed podcast.

0:39.1

Science progresses through breakthrough discoveries, but what never seems to happen is that a discovery is found.

0:45.9

Everyone sees its significance and importance, and they accept it, and science advances, and there's no friction.

0:51.8

Instead, what you see is hostile competition, information hoarding, and criticism that is silenced and dis's no friction. Instead, what you see is hostile competition, informational

0:54.5

hoarding, and criticism that is silenced and disenfranchised and exiled and sometimes

0:59.7

executed revolutionary thinkers. From Alexander Gordon being forced to flee Aberdeen

1:04.2

after proving doctors spread deadly infections, to Hungarian doctor Ignaz Semmelweis,

1:08.8

being fired and exiled for insisting doctors wash their hands between autopsies and deliveries,

1:14.2

scientists always seem to pay devastating personal prices for challenging orthodoxies.

1:18.6

Other examples are Pierre-Louis being attacked for using statistics to prove blood lighting was useless,

1:23.8

or Joseph Lister facing ridicule for suggesting invisible germs cause infections,

1:28.6

or Jean Toussaint, suffering a nervous breakdown after Louis Pasteur,

1:32.7

appropriated his anthrax vaccine discovery.

1:35.7

Today's guest is science journalist Matt Kaplan, author of I Told You So,

...

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