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Biologically, man is still the great amateur of the animal kingdom he is unique in his lack of anatomical and physiological specialization.
Rene Dubos
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Rene Dubos
Age: 80 †
Born: 1901
Born: February 20
Died: 1982
Died: February 20
Academic
Agronomist
Biologist
Environmentalist
Microbiologist
Non-Fiction Writer
Pensador
Philosopher
Physician
Scientist
University Teacher
Saint-Brice-sous-Foret
René Jules Dubos
Rene Dubos
Rene Jules Dubos
Great
Kingdom
Men
Kingdoms
Lack
Unique
Anatomical
Mankind
Biologically
Animal
Specialization
Stills
Physiological
Still
Amateur
More quotes by Rene Dubos
The belief that we can manage the Earth and improve on Nature is probably the ultimate expression of human conceit, but it has deep roots in the past and is almost universal.
Rene Dubos
Clearly, health and disease cannot be defined merely in terms of anatomical, physiological, or mental attributes. Their real measure is the ability of the individual to function in a manner acceptable to himself and to the group of which he is a part.
Rene Dubos
In 1946, Oxford University in England was offered large funds to create a new Institute of Human Nutrition. The University refused the funds on the ground that the knowledge of human nutrition was essentially complete, and that the proposed institution would soon run out of meaningful research projects.
Rene Dubos
The mechanisms of vis medicatrix naturæ—the most healing power of nature—are so effective that most diseases are self-terminating.
Rene Dubos
To ward off disease or recover health, people as a rule find it easier to depend on healers than to attempt the more difficult task of living wisely.
Rene Dubos
...Search for the cause may be a hopeless pursuit because most disease states are the indirect outcome of a constellation of circumstances.
Rene Dubos
The most important pathological effects of pollution are extremely delayed and indirect.
Rene Dubos
Human life is now molded to a large extent by the changes that man has brought about in his external environment and by his attempts at controlling body and soul.
Rene Dubos
There is a demon in technology. It was put there by man and man will have to exorcise it before technological civilization can achieve the eighteenth-century ideal of humane civilized life.
Rene Dubos
Human life implies adventure, and there is no adventure without struggles and dangers.
Rene Dubos
Each civilization has its own kind of pestilence and can control it only by reforming itself.
Rene Dubos
Human diversity makes tolerance more than a virtue it makes it a requirement for survival.
Rene Dubos
Gauss replied, when asked how soon he expected to reach certain mathematical conclusions, that he had them long ago, all he was worrying about was how to reach them!
Rene Dubos
The word wilderness occurs approximately three hundred times in the Bible, and all its meanings are derogatory.
Rene Dubos
Men are naturally most impressed by diseases which have obvious manifestations, yet some of their worst enemies creep on them unobtrusively.
Rene Dubos
... each type of civilization has had diseases peculiar to it and at each period the various social groups in any community also have differed in this regard.
Rene Dubos
It is a disturbing fact that Western civilization, which claims to have achieved the highest standard of health in history, finds itself compelled to spend ever-increasing sums for the control of disease.
Rene Dubos
The very process of living is a continual interplay between the individual and his environment, often taking the form of a struggle resulting in injury or disease.
Rene Dubos
Man not only survives and functions in his environment, he shapes it and he is shaped by it.
Rene Dubos
... men as a rule are more preoccupied with the dangers that threaten their life than interested in the biological forces on which they depend for a constructive existence.
Rene Dubos