Top 68 Quotes & Sayings by Jonas Salk

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American scientist Jonas Salk.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Jonas Salk

Jonas Edward Salk was an American virologist and medical researcher who developed one of the first successful polio vaccines. He was born in New York City and attended the City College of New York and New York University School of Medicine.

There is hope in dreams, imagination, and in the courage of those who wish to make those dreams a reality.
Hope lies in dreams, in imagination, and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality.
Nothing happens quite by chance. It's a question of accretion of information and experience. β€” Β© Jonas Salk
Nothing happens quite by chance. It's a question of accretion of information and experience.
The worst tragedy that could have befallen me was my success. I knew right away that I was through - cast out.
I pictured myself as a virus or a cancer cell and tried to sense what it would be like.
It is always with excitement that I wake up in the morning wondering what my intuition will toss up to me, like gifts from the sea. I work with it and rely on it. It's my partner.
Intuition will tell the thinking mind where to look next.
The reward for work well done is the opportunity to do more.
I have had dreams and I have had nightmares, but I have conquered my nightmares because of my dreams.
Life is an error-making and an error-correcting process.
Risks, I like to say, always pay off. You learn what to do, or what not to do.
My job is to help people see what I see. If it's of value, fine. And, if it's not of value, then at least I've done what I can do.
Find the right questions. You don't invent the answers, you reveal the answers. β€” Β© Jonas Salk
Find the right questions. You don't invent the answers, you reveal the answers.
I'm saying that we should trust our intuition. I believe that the principles of universal evolution are revealed to us through intuition. And I think that if we combine our intuition and our reason, we can respond in an evolutionary sound way to our problems.
The art of science is as important as so-called technical science. You need both. It's this combination that must be recognized and acknowledged and valued.
My ambition was to bring to bear on medicine a chemical approach. I did that by chemical manipulation of viruses and chemical ways of thinking in biomedical research.
It is said to await certainty is to await eternity.
A wisdom deficit - fewer elders and even fewer people who listen to them.
I think of evolution as an error-making and error-correcting process, and we are constantly learning from experience.
Your dreams tell you what to do; your reason tells you how to do it.
There is a moment of conception and a moment of birth, but between them there is a long period of gestation.
I think of the need for more wisdom in the world, to deal with the knowledge that we have. At one time we had wisdom, but little knowledge. Now we have a great deal of knowledge, but do we have enough wisdom to deal with that knowledge?
Now, some people might look at something and let it go by, because they don't recognize the pattern and the significance. It's the sensitivity to pattern recognition that seems to me to be of great importance. It's a matter of being able to find meaning, whether it's positive or negative, in whatever you encounter. It's like a journey. It's like finding the paths that will allow you to go forward, or that path that has a block that tells you to start over again or do something else.
Life is an error-making and an error-correctin g process, and nature in marking man's papers will grade him for wisdom as measured both by survival and by the quality of life of those who survive.
A good parent gives their child roots and wings.
Good parents give their children Roots and Wings. Roots to know where home is, wings to fly away and exercise what's been taught them.
If all the insects were to disappear from the earth, within 50 years all life on earth would end. If all human beings disappeared from the earth, within 50 years all forms of life would flourish.
I have come to recognize evolution not only as an active process that I am experiencing at the time, but as something I can guide by the choices I make.
The people - could you patent the sun ?
If humankind would accept and acknowledge this responsibility and become creatively engaged in the process of evolution, consciously as well as unconsciously, a new reality would emerge, and a new age could be born.
When things get bad enough, then something happens to correct the course. And it's for that reason that I speak about evolution as an error-making and an error-correcting process. And if we can be ever so much better - ever so much slightly better - at error correcting than at error making, then we'll make it.
I overcame the nightmares because of my dreams.
If all insects disappeared, all life on earth would perish. If all humans disappeared, all life on earth would flourish.
What people think of as the moment of discovery is really the discovery of the question.
As a child I was not interested in science. I was merely interested in things human, the human side of nature, if you like, and I continue to be interested in that. That's what motivates me.
We were told in one lecture that it was possible to immunize against diphtheria and tetanus by the use of chemically treated toxins, or toxoids. And the following lecture, we were told that for immunization against a virus disease, you have to experience the infection, and that you could not induce immunity with the so-called "killed" or inactivated, chemically treated virus preparation. Well, somehow, that struck me. What struck me was that both statements couldn't be true. And I asked why this was so, and the answer that was given was in a sense, 'Because.' There was no satisfactory answer.
When I worked on the polio vaccine, I had a theory. I guided each [experiment] by imagining myself in the phenomenon in which I was interested. The intuitive realm . . . the realm of the imagination guides my thinking.
It is possible to create an epidemic of health which is self-organizing and self-propelling. β€” Β© Jonas Salk
It is possible to create an epidemic of health which is self-organizing and self-propelling.
I speak about universal evolution and teleological evolution, because I think the process of evolution reflects the wisdom of nature. I see the need for wisdom to become operative. We need to try to put all of these things together in what I call an evolutionary philosophy of our time.
Solutions come through evolution. They come through asking the right questions, because the answers pre-exist. It is the questions that we must define and discover. You don't invent the answer-you reveal the answer.
Our greatest responsibility is to be good ancestors.
Eventually we'll realize that if we destroy the ecosystem, we destroy ourselves.
The most important question we must ask ourselves is, 'Are we being good ancestors?'
Are we being good ancestors?
Reply when questioned on the safety of the polio vaccine he developed: It is safe, and you can't get safer than safe.
When you inoculate children with a polio vaccine, you don't sleep well for two or three months.
There is no such thing as failure, there's just giving up too soon.
It is courage based on confidence, not daring, and it is confidence based on experience. β€” Β© Jonas Salk
It is courage based on confidence, not daring, and it is confidence based on experience.
I look upon ourselves as partners in all of this, and that each of us contributes and does what he can do best. And so I see not a top rung and a bottom rung - I see all this horizontally - and I see this as part of a matrix. And I see every human being as having a purpose, a destiny, if you like - the destiny that exists in each of us - and find ways and means to provide such opportunities for everyone.
As a bio-philosopher - as someone who draws upon the scriptures of nature, recognizing that we are the product of the process of evolution, and in a sense, we have become the process itself - through the emergence and evolution of our consciousness, our awareness, our capacity to imagine and to anticipate the future and to choose from amongst alternatives.
You can have a team of unconventional thinkers, as well as conventional thinkers. If you don't have the support of others you cannot achieve anything altogether on your own. It's like a cry in the wilderness. In each instance there were others who could see the same thing, and there were others who could not. It's an obvious difference we see in those who you might say have a bird's eye view, and those who have a worm's eye view. I've come to realize that we all have a different mind set, we all see things differently, and that's what the human condition is really all about.
One of the greatest rewards for doing can be the chances it gives to do some more - even better.
What is … important is that we β€” number one: Learn to live with each other. Number two: try to bring out the best in each other. The best from the best, and the best from those who, perhaps, might not have the same endowment. And so this bespeaks an entirely different philosophy β€” a different way of life β€” a different kind of relationship β€” where the object is not to put down the other, but to raise up the other.
This is perhaps the most beautiful time in human history; it is really pregnant with all kinds of creative possibilities made possible by science and technology which now constitute the slave of man - if man is not enslaved by it.
What is ... important is that we - number one: Learn to live with each other. Number two: try to bring out the best in each other.
What you see in living systems, and in genetic systems, is that the genes are already there, having arisen in the course of time, and when they are needed they become activated. If they had to be invented, the time would be too late.
Evolution favors the survival of the wisest.
The mind, in addition to medicine, has powers to turn the immune system around.
Wisdom: It's something that you know when you see it. You can recognize it, you can experience it. I have defined wisdom as the capacity to make judgments that when looked back upon will seem to have been wise.
[Who owns the patent on this vaccine?] Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?
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