Top 39 Quotes & Sayings by John Sulston

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British scientist John Sulston.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
John Sulston

Sir John Edward Sulston was a British biologist and academic who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on the cell lineage and genome of the worm Caenorhabditis elegans in 2002 with his colleagues Sydney Brenner and Robert Horvitz. He was a leader in human genome research and Chair of the Institute for Science, Ethics and Innovation at the University of Manchester. Sulston was in favour of science in the public interest, such as free public access of scientific information and against the patenting of genes and the privatisation of genetic technologies.

The Wellcome Trust is a hugely important organisation, and it is vital that its fundraising continues unabated.
On my mother's side, I come from Midlands engineers and, on my father's, from tenant farmers near Oxford.
You have to say - and I do - that anything that blocks that cheapest possible point-of-care delivery of health is wrong. — © John Sulston
You have to say - and I do - that anything that blocks that cheapest possible point-of-care delivery of health is wrong.
I don't think one ought to bring a clearly disabled child into the world.
Muriel, my mother, was my main confidant. She was a teacher of English at Watford grammar school but took a break while my sister Madeleine and I were children. She held court in the kitchen, and we talked about everything.
The myth is that IP rights are as important as our rights in castles, cars, and corn oil. IP is supposedly intended to encourage inventors and the investment needed to bring their products to the clinic and marketplace.
I'm pleased that some economists and sociologists are beginning to talk about, for example, alternative measures of human well-being - alternative, that is, to GDP, on which the world runs.
When results are shared freely amongst the biological community, as has been done for the worm and the Human Genome Projects, specialist scientists can move much more rapidly towards their goals.
The currencies of science are discoveries and ideas; the rewards are the excitement of going where nobody has been before and, if one is inclined to such things, the kudos of peer acclaim, plus funds to do more research.
In science, as in business, there must be structures that ensure the well endowed do not use their position to block competition.
I would say if we can select children who are not going to be severely disadvantaged, then we should do so, but I think it has to be done by voluntary choice.
There's always a tension between those who would like to garner wealth, and they contribute a lot to society. There's also those who say, 'I believe in the common good. I want that to be enlarged.' They contribute a lot to society. The tension, the debate, between these two views is extremely important to our progress.
As far back as I remember, and earlier, I was an artisan, a maker and doer. Mechanically minded, my parents said. — © John Sulston
As far back as I remember, and earlier, I was an artisan, a maker and doer. Mechanically minded, my parents said.
The fact is that proprietary databases don't work for such basic and broadly needed information as the sequence of the human genome.
Many people thought that, given my knowledge of the egg, I should analyse embryonic mutants.
Whilst worthy in themselves, applications shouldn't be the only way to drive basic research.
I believe our basic information, our 'software', should be free and open for everyone to play with, to compete with, to try and make products from. I do not believe it should be under the control of one person.
It is very clear that the present system of innovation for medicines is very inefficient and really somewhat corrupt. It benefits shareholders over patients; it produces for the rich markets and not for the poor and does not produce for minority diseases.
It is not a Pandora's box that science opens; it is, rather, a treasure chest. We, humanity, can choose whether or not to take out the discoveries and use them, and for what purpose.
Our work on C. elegans emphasized the benefits of sharing large amounts of information. We took a global approach to discover the mechanisms that led to the development of the worm.
The strong evidence is that we're running out of space. We're collectively affecting the world's climate. This is due to the still-growing human population and our increase in consumption.
Biomedical research is only as good as its delivery. Distribution of medicines by charities is no more than a stopgap.
I don't want a few extra weeks of life at enormous cost, for example, when it comes to the end.
In order to protect the market value of a proprietary database, the owner must prohibit redistribution of the contents - otherwise, the information would quickly leak out and be widely known.
When it came to choice of subjects, science was obvious - since I was uninterested in anything else - but a decision that caused consternation in some eyes was my demand to take biology for A-level.
It was a matter of not living lavishly but enjoying what you had, growing things with your hands, working hard, but not being tied to a nine-to-five job, and generally feeling that there's more to life than money.
An awful lot of food is thrown away. This you can call a spillover. It doesn't sort of enter into our economic system because it's a consequence of running things in a highly competitive way: the free market, global pricing and so on.
We can choose to address the twin issues of population and consumption to rebalance the use of resources to a more egalitarian pattern of consumption. — © John Sulston
We can choose to address the twin issues of population and consumption to rebalance the use of resources to a more egalitarian pattern of consumption.
The fruits of science and innovation have nourished our society and economy for years, but nations unable to navigate our regulatory system are often excluded, as are vulnerable individuals.
Title deeds establish and protect ownership of our houses, while security of property is as important to the proprietors of Tesco and Sainsbury's as it is to their customers.
If you patent a discovery which is unique, say a human gene or even just one particular function of a human gene, then you are actually creating a monopoly, and that's not the purpose of the world of patents.
Science and the many benefits that science has produced have played a crucial part in our history and produced vast improvements to human welfare.
We knew that all the protein-coding bits of genes do is to produce protein - they have to have instructions to turn them on and off. Those sequences lie well outside the protein-coding sequences, sometimes thousands, tens of thousands of bases away.
I wandered along to the chemistry labs, more or less on the rebound, and asked about becoming a research student. It was the '60s, a time of university expansion: the doors were open, and a 2:1 was good enough to get me in.
If we understand the worm, we understand life.
The human world lives in a framework called global economics. We live in a system based on GDP, which drives consumption. it causes people to compete with each other through trade in a way that they all grow.
The free market is the epitome of life itself. This is something that all scientists recognise because science itself operates on free market lines.
What is the purpose of being human and alive without doing new things? — © John Sulston
What is the purpose of being human and alive without doing new things?
The only thing I have retained from my upbringing - I did not retain the religious element - is the idea that you do not do things for money.
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