Roslyn Sussman Yalow Quotes - Interesting, Entertaining, Serious, Thoughtful, Inspiring Quotes of Nobel Prize Winning American Medical Physicist, Developer of Radioimmunoassay Technique
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow died on 30 May 2011 in New York City. Roslyn Sussman Yalow was a well-known American medical physicist and co-winner (with Roger Guillemin and Andrew Scali) of the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the development of the radioimmunoassay technique. Roslyn Sussman Yalow was the second woman (after Gerty Cori) and the first American-born woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Here are some interesting, entertaining, serious, thoughtful, exemplary, inspiring Quotes of Roslyn Sussman Yalow
We must believe in ourselves because no one else will believe in us, we must match our expectations with the ability, courage and determination to succeed.
The zeal to learn separates youth from old age. As long as you are learning, you are not old. We must believe in ourselves, otherwise no one will believe in us.
We pass on to you, the next generation, our knowledge, but also our problems. While we are alive, let us work with hand, heart and mind to find their solution so that your world will be better than ours and the world of your children will be even better.
We cannot expect in the near future that all women who want it will attain full equality of opportunity. But if women are to move toward that goal, we must believe in ourselves.
If you ever have a new idea, and it is truly new, you must expect that it will not be immediately widely accepted. It is a long and difficult process.
There is currently a powerful activist movement in the United States that is anti-intellectual, anti-science and anti-technology. If we are to have faith that the human race will survive and flourish on Earth, we must rely on the continuing revolutions brought about by science.
The first telescope opened up the heavens. The first microscope opened up the world of microorganisms. The radioisotopic method, as exemplified by RIA, has shown the potential to open new dimensions in science and medicine.
We are still living in a world in which a significant portion of people, including women, believe that a woman is and should remain at home.
Radioimmunoassay (RIA) is simple in principle.
If we are to have faith that the human race will survive and flourish on earth, we must believe that each successive generation will be wiser than its ancestors. We give you, the next generation, the sum total of our knowledge. It is your responsibility to use it, add to it and pass it on to your children.
All women scientists must marry, raise children, cook and clean in order to attain perfection, to become a complete woman.
The failure of women to reach leadership positions is mainly due to social and occupational discrimination.
I have long felt that the problem with discrimination is not the discrimination itself, but that those who are discriminated against feel second class.
In the past, few women have tried and even fewer have succeeded.
My crystal ball tells me that the impact of the RIA, radioimmunoassay, on the study of infectious diseases in the '80s may prove as revolutionary as its impact on endocrinology in the '60s.
The war gave opportunities to women like her, not the feminist movement, and if opportunities diminished after the war, she feels it was because women didn't want them.
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