Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Italian scientist Renato Dulbecco.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Renato Dulbecco was an Italian–American virologist who won the 1975 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on oncoviruses, which are viruses that can cause cancer when they infect animal cells. He studied at the University of Turin under Giuseppe Levi, along with fellow students Salvador Luria and Rita Levi-Montalcini, who also moved to the U.S. with him and won Nobel prizes. He was drafted into the Italian army in World War II, but later joined the resistance.
We have ourselves begun to put our house in order by banning some experiments that may contain a risk for mankind. We would like to see society take a similar attitude, abandoning selfish practices that are dangerous for society itself.
I stress the relevance of my work for cancer research because I believe that science must be useful to man.
The life I remember begins at Imperia, where I went to school, including the Ginnasio-Liceo 'De Amicis.'
I was born in Catanzaro, Italy, from a Calabrese mother and a Ligurian father.
Indiana was so lovely. Just so lovely.
All through the student years, I was at the top of my class although I was two years younger than everybody else.
Competition, I think, is always a good thing.
Although I liked especially physics and mathematics for which I had considerable talent, I decided to study medicine. This profession had for me a strong emotional appeal, which was reinforced by having an uncle who was an excellent surgeon.
People try to do better than other people. It's an incentive.
While we spend our life asking questions about the nature of cancer and ways to prevent or cure it, society merrily produces oncogenic substances and permeates the environment with them.
Historically, science and society have gone separate ways, although society has provided the funds for science to grow, and in return, science has given society all the material things it enjoys.
Society does not seem prepared to accept the sacrifices required for an effective prevention of cancer.
I know mortality exists, but I cannot do anything about it. So it does not make me anxious.