Immunity Theory Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Immunity Theory with everyone.
Top Immunity Theory Quotes

The production of antibody is not the only, nor I believe the most important, manifestation of immunity, but for reasons both historical and of experimental convenience, antibody is likely to remain the touchstone of immunological theory. — Frank Macfarlane Burnet

We need to give the Iraqis a chance to build their own future. It should be in their hands. It must be in their hands. That is what democracy is all about. We can teach it, we can explain it, but they must want it enough to make it work for them. — Barbara Boxer

East and West, most societies have come to believe that competition will produce more prosperity for more people than a planned economy. I share that belief. — Anthony Lewis

Everything happens for a reason. Sometimes you won't be on the beneficial end of it but either way it's a blessing in disguise. — Behdad Sami

As long as there are guns, the individual that wants a gun for a crime is going to have one and going to get it. The only person who's going to be penalized and have difficulty is the law-abiding citizen, who then cannot have [it] if he wants protection
the protection of a weapon in his home. — Ronald Reagan

For a woman, body image is always a palpable thing. Weirdly, for me, the only time I don't care is when I'm in character. — Juno Temple

The only certainties in life are "time" and "change." The question you must ask yourself: is now the time to change? — Doug Pedersen

Solitude The creation of an open, empty space in our lives by purposefully abstaining from interaction with other human beings, so that, freed from competing loyalties, we can be found by God The — Richard J. Foster

I never learned to read girls. I guess I'm girl-illiterate. — Robert Schell

All sorts of risk-benefit analyses and models of herd immunity tend to produce the conclusion that vaccination benefits the individual as well as the public. When Harvard researchers recently used game theory to build a mathematical model of vaccination behavior during an influenza epidemic, they found that even "a population of self-interested people can defeat an epidemic." No altruism is required. — Eula Biss