
Nobel Prize in Medicine Contested 100
GeoGreg writes "The AP is reporting that Dr. Raymond Damadian is asking the Nobel committee to add him to the list of recipients of this year's prize in medicine. His company claims that he made the key discovery leading to MRI, and that the two recipients (Paul Laterbur and Peter Mansfield) made technological improvements. This link indicates that Damadian showed that magnetic resonance could distinguish between types of tissue, while Laterbur and Mansfield showed that images could be formed using magnetic resonance."
Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:3, Interesting)
Right now, even though there are other awards that have a higher monetary value, the Nobel is the most prestigious because of its name and history. If they have a few spe
Re:Well (Score:2)
That said, I still think is sounds like he deserves to be recognised. Just a simple "he helped", "he contributed", or the guys who got it could say "we couldn't have done it if we didn't know what he found out". But I agree, they shouldn't be forced to give the prize to him too or anything.
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:1)
In either case, bitching and whining about not wining a prize is bad form. (I know a similar case where someone's collaborators won the Nobel, but he wasn't nominated. He wasn't happy about it, but hi
it's ludicrous (Score:1)
would give the award to an avowed creationist.
it really doesn't matter that he invented
the process. to give this man a nobel would
bring the prize into disrepute.
Re:it's ludicrous (Score:2)
The fact that he's a creationist (which I haven't even checked for validity) has nothing to do with whether or not he invented the MRI idea.
Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
"Oh, I'm sorry, you believe in Thor, so we can't possible give you this honor, but we would have given it to you if you didn't... I don't suppose you could stop believing in him for a couple of weeks, could you?"
--
Man, I can't believe I responded to a Troll.
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
> What on earth makes you think that a person's religious beliefs have anything at all to do with whether or not they are eligible for the Nobel Prize?
Would you give a prestigious scientific award to, say, a chemist who believed the world was flat and the heavenly bodies rotated around it, regardless of his contributions to chemistry?
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:3, Insightful)
If Watson & Crick had believed the world sat on the back of a giant turtle, they still discovered DNA, and that's still a Nobel-worthy achievement.
For pete's sake, Alfred Nobel himself believed that if he created a destructive enough weapon, it would end mankind's penchant for war!
Ergo, the Nobel Prize signifies ACHIEVEMENT, not BELIEF.
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
thinking of the Fields medal.
Why no math Nobel? Something to do with Mrs.
Nobel and one Mr. Gauss.
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
Mrs. Nobel and Mr. Gauss (Score:1)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
It amuses me when people become more ignorant than the people they believe are ignorant, if that makes sense.
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:1)
Complete ignorance on everyone's part.
Re: Speaking of ludicrous... (Score:2)
Of course, to be serious, the principle is not that simple. It is more like "The propagation of your beliefs is a danger to our own goals. -> Screw you." Why
Popularity of views do have a say in the Nobel... (Score:1)
They gave Yasser Arafat a Nobel Peace prize... (Score:2)
He did actually invent MRI; Paul Lauterbur made a refinement in imaging technique and Peter Mansfield made improvements to the analysis of the raw data [about.com], so the absence of his name is indeed singular. More so because Damadian actually built the first working scanner, holds the patent on MRI (and 39 other patents too), and built the first commercial MRI scanner.
Perhaps even more striking and demonstrating that he was
Re:They gave Yasser Arafat a Nobel Peace prize... (Score:2)
According to this link [man.ac.uk], Damadian intended to use MRI for tissue characterization, not imaging. It was Laterbur that first used MRI to make a 2-dimensional image. If you look at Damadian's patent [uspto.gov], there is no mention made of imaging. Rather, it covers two methods specifically designed to detect the presence of cancerous tissue (either in a sample or in the body). No imaging is implied. So, while he may have been impor
The site you link is kind of stale (Score:2)
Damadian did build the first MRI table, is still in the business, is still innovating, and as at now builds the best (or at least most impressive) MRI scanner available.
The other germane point is that the two awardees simply refined his invention (and then he turned around in the best GPLish style and refined theirs, and built the first working one), they did not do the original research that made the whole process possible. The beanh
Re:The site you link is kind of stale (Score:2)
Parallels (Score:2)
Not saying that their work was other than excellent, just that it was developmental rather than revolutionary. Radar and sonar had already covered a lot of the ground they needed.
It would also startle me if Damadian h
Re:Parallels (Score:2)
So... (Score:2)
Just eyeing off your username now and wonderig why I should take you seriously...
That's just . . . . (Score:4, Insightful)
History is full of examples of people who were overlooked for the Nobel Prize. (Rosalind Franklin, anyone? Heck, Einstein was never recognized with that award for his really major works: special and general relativity.) The prize isn't something people "earn" and it's not something that you're entitled to. It's something that one particular group of people decide to bestow upon you because you've done significant work in their view.
I personally know at least one person fairly well who was overlooked for a Nobel. (This in the view of most of his collegues. Having read the work in question, I tend to agree.) He's very mellow about it, rather praising his friends who did win the prize. To take out ads to bitch makes me suspect that this guy is stuck in the 4-year-old emotional stage. (Or he's greedy and he wants a cut of the $1 million. Either way, pathetic.)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:3, Informative)
In this case, the guy made the seminal discovery, he's on the patents, and he's been associated with it from the start. To be left off the Prize is
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Donate enough money to endow your own prize, then you can give it out in your own way. And you can get all the lovely complaints by loudmouts who feel that they are entitled to your money.
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
So I ask you again, where do you get off telling them what to do with their prizes?
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Can't have it both ways, pup.
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
No, I'm saying that you need to respect other people's opinions about what is right or wrong and not assume that you have the sole window on morality.
The folks in Sweden have been asked to award the Nobels each year. Someone not only invested them with the power to decide, but trusted them to decide wisely. Unfortunately, given the paucity of awards, it will always be unfair to many people who don't get Nobel Prizes. However, I'd cut them some slack and give them t
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
And cut me the slack to have a different opinion.
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
Despicable like the boy scouts (another private organization) excluding people simply for being gay?
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
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Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
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Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
For that matter, the discovery of pulsars netted a Nobel for Hewish and Bell. Show me the application of *that* little beauty. And next, show me how detecting pulsar orbital decay (confirming general relativity) is applicable. And why *that* is more important tha
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re: That's just . . . . (Score:3, Informative)
> History is full of examples of people who were overlooked for the Nobel Prize. [...] The prize isn't something people "earn" and it's not something that you're entitled to. It's something that one particular group of people decide to bestow upon you because you've done significant work in their view.
Various scientists quoted in the biomedcentral [biomedcentral.com] article suggest that the decision may be very legit, even if controversial:
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:1)
I admit that the case of GR is fuzzy (What was the input of Einstein's wife, for instance?), but about SR: what did Einstein add that was not yet there in the work of Lorentz (the formula's) and Poincare (the principle & the interpretation of Lorentz's formula's)?
Re:That's just . . . . (Score:2)
As to SR, Einstein was the first person to really cast off Newtonian phys
Einstein's Nobel prize & the relativity theori (Score:1)
We do not have to wait until Poincare's 1904 speech at the International Congress of Arts & Siences in St. Louis (USA) to find evidence of his relativity principle. He was working on it since the 1880s. In 1889 he's quoted to have said "we have no direct intuition about the equality of two time intervals." ( website of the Nobel Committee [nobel.se])
In "La Science et l'hypothese" (Flammarion, Paris, 1902), we read in chapter VI on "space" (p. 111-112): "1. Il n'y a pas d'espace abso
Correction (Score:1)
Science and Hypothesis (Score:1)
Nobel Prize is important (Score:1)
he said excluded (Score:3, Informative)
Re:he said excluded (Score:2)
Re:he said excluded (Score:1)
Re:he said excluded (Score:2)
"Q. Has X been nominated as a candidate for the Nobel Prize? Where do I find a list of Nobel Prize nominees?
A. According to the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation, nominators must not make public the names of the nominees nor inform nominees privately of the proposals. Even invitations to propose names are confidential. Proposals received for the award of a prize, and investigations and opinions concerning the award of a prize may not be divulged. The names of the nominees
I call bullstuff! (Score:2)
IIRC, there is historical precedence for this. Nobels are occasionally awarded for improvements or modifications of a theory without recognizing the original work. Nothing to see here except whining.
They've excluded him for his personal beliefs (Score:2)
Personally, I think Nobel Committee has set a pretty dangerous precedent that pretty much punishes researches who have views which deviate from majority's point of view.
Would Nobel Committee award a
Re:They've excluded him for his personal beliefs (Score:2, Informative)
Re:They've excluded him for his personal beliefs (Score:2)
we can't go around sulking, nor turning everyone into a martyr. did they do it for religious reasons? i don't know, maybe they didn't like the way he tied his shoelaces or perhaps -gasp- he wears velcro shoes. will we hear no end from propone
Re:They've excluded him for his personal beliefs (Score:2)
Creationism, at least some forms of it, are deliberately anti-scientific and anti-rationalistic. It proposes non-falsifiable hypotheses with zero explanatory power. At least according to the link, this guy appears to be of that sort.
Plenty of people have a casual belief in a Higher Power that comforts them and (while they're at it) also fills in some of the gaps in origins theories.
MRI'd still exist without Damadian. (Score:2)
This is just not so. While Mozart's music would not have been made without Mozart, we're talking about a scientific discovery that's just waiting for somebody to pick up on. You can replace one scientist for another and the advance of human knowledge will continue. It may be slightly faster or slower, require more or less people and/or resources, but it will continue--and I say that as a someone who
Re:MRI'd still exist without Damadian. (Score:2)
Re:MRI'd still exist without Damadian. (Score:2)
Re:MRI'd still exist without Damadian. (Score:2)
Pick up "By Any Other Name" (Baen 2001). It's an anthology of short stories, one of which deals with copyright law. In it, he suggests that music is just a combonation of numbers in a random order. Out of the myriad permutations available, most will sound like crap, but some will sound good. Copyright needs to expire, because there's still a finite number of possible combonations of numbers within a given time period, and eventually we will simply run out of
Re:MRI'd still exist without Damadian. (Score:2)
Re:MRI'd still exist without Damadian. (Score:2)
This whole thing bothers me. (Score:2)
It's obvious why he didn't get it (Score:2)
...greatest benefit on mankind (Score:2)
On November 27, 1895, a year before his death, Alfred Nobel signed the famous will which would implement some of the goals to which he had devoted so much of his life. Nobel stipulated in his will that most of his estate, more than SEK 31 million (today approximately SEK 1,500 million) should be converted into a fund and invested in "safe securities."
The income from the investments was to be "distributed annually in the form of prizes to
The Nobel Comittee will never change it's mind. (Score:2)
NPR says the guy doesn't even use his own tech (Score:2)
If it were an American Prize (Score:1)
I also am reminded of an appropraite life's not fair quote from the princess bride
"Life is pain...anything who says otherwise is selling something"
Damadian might access the prize criteria (Score:2)
" 10. No appeals may be made against the decision of a prize-awarding body with regard to the award of a prize.
Proposals received for the award of a prize, and investigations and opinions concerning the award of a prize, may not be divulged. Should divergent opinions have been expressed in connection with the decision of a prize-awarding body concerning the award of