Top 24 Quotes & Sayings by Joseph Murray

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

Joseph Edward Murray was an American plastic surgeon who performed the first successful human kidney transplant on identical twins Richard and Ronald Herrick on December 23, 1954.

I still have a vivid memory of my excitement when I first saw a chart of the periodic table of elements. The order in the universe seemed miraculous.
My only wish would be to have 10 more lives to live on this planet. If that were possible, I'd spend one lifetime each in embryology, genetics, physics, astronomy and geology. The other lifetimes would be as a pianist, backwoodsman, tennis player, or writer for the 'National Geographic.'
It's the best time ever to be a doctor because you can heal and treat conditions that were untreatable even a few years ago. — © Joseph Murray
It's the best time ever to be a doctor because you can heal and treat conditions that were untreatable even a few years ago.
At heart, I'm a reconstructive surgeon.
Stem cells are probably going to be extremely useful.
You cannot stop the human mind from working.
Kidney transplants seem so routine now. But the first one was like Lindbergh's flight across the ocean.
I wanted to be a surgeon, possibly influenced by the qualities of our family doctor who cared for our childhood ailments.
If you're going to worry about what people say, you're never going to make any progress.
Service to society is the rent we pay for living on this planet.
Post-operatively the transplanted kidney functioned immediately with a dramatic improvement in the patient's renal and cardiopulmonary status. This spectacular success was a clear demonstration that organ transplantation could be life-saving.
Work is a prayer. And I start off every morning dedicating it to our Creator.
The slow rejection of the foreign skin grafts fascinated me. How could the host distinguish another person's skin from his own?
Blanket objection is not very reasonable to me - any effort to control scientific advances is doomed to fail.
Stem cells are probably going to be extremely useful. But it isn't a given, and even if it were, I don't think the end justifies the means. I am not against stem cells, I think it's great. Blanket objection is not very reasonable to me-any effort to control scientific advances is doomed to fail. You cannot stop the human mind from working.
And I start off every morning dedicating it to our Creator.
Its the best time ever to be a doctor because you can heal and treat conditions that were untreatable even a few years ago.
I tell [medical students] that they are the luckiest persons on earth to be in medical school, and to forget all this worry about H.M.O.'s and keep your eye on helping the patient. It's the best time ever to be a doctor because you can heal and treat conditions that were untreatable even a couple of years ago.
Post-operatively the transplanted kidney functioned immediately with a dramatic improvement in the patients renal and cardiopulmonary status. This spectacular success was a clear demonstration that organ transplantation could be life-saving.
I've never regretted a swim — © Joseph Murray
I've never regretted a swim
It is probably no exaggeration to suppose that in order to improve such an organ as the eye at all, it must be improved in ten different ways at once. And the improbability of any complex organ being produced and brought to perfection in any such way is an improbability of the same kind and degree as that of producing a poem or a mathematical demonstration by throwing letters at random on a table.
One of my surgical giant friends had in his operating room a sign "If the operation is difficult, you aren't doing it right." What he meant was, you have to plan every operation You cannot ever be casual You have to realize that any operation is a potential fatality.
Animal experimentation has been essential to the development of all cardiac surgery, transplantation surgery, joint replacements and all vaccinations.
Is the Church inimical to science? Growing up as a Catholic and a scientist - I don't see it. One truth is revealed truth, the other is scientific truth. If you really believe that creation is good, there can be no harm in studying science. The more we learn about creation - the way it emerged - it just adds to the glory of God. Personally, I've never seen a conflict.
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