The delusional creep Hawly, who cannot separate here fantasies about me from reality, would have you believe that no science has been done by believers in God. She is the worst kind of revisionist, because she is relentless in her repetitive brainwashing techniques, posting the same thing over and over and over. So much so that those who lack discernment and are easily manipulated like Daws and NP, actually fall for its revisionism. Here is yet another science loathing Christian:
Joseph Murray (b. 1919), winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine and Physiology in 1990.
Who is he and what is he famous for?
Joseph E. Murray (born 1919) was granted the 1990 Nobel Prize in Medicine and Physiology (which he shared with E. Donnall Thomas) for work that proved to a doubting world that it was possible to transplant organs to save the lives of dying patients. Murray was the first to perform kidney transplants. He is one of the founders of modern transplantology.
How do his beliefs about the human mind contradict Darwinian evolution?
He is a devout Catholic, who believes that each and every human being has a soul which is directly created by God.
Wheres the evidence?
In his article Murray: Surgeon with soul (Harvard University Gazette, 4 October 2001), John Lenger described Murrays views on the spiritual aspects of surgery. Surprisingly, Murray believes that each of us has a spiritual soul:
To Murray, a doctors responsibility is to treat each patient as not just a set of symptoms, but as someone with a spirit that can be helped through medical procedures. The title of his autobiography, Surgery of the Soul (Boston Medical Library, 2001), stems from Murrays spiritually based approach to medicine. Though he has in the past hesitated to talk publicly about his faith, for fear of being lumped in with the televangelist crowd, Murray is deeply religious. Work is a prayer, he said, and I start off every morning dedicating it to our Creator. Every day is a prayer I feel that, and I feel that very strongly. (Murray, as cited in Lenger, John. 2001. Murray: Surgeon with soul: Nobelists memoir mixes science and humanity, in Harvard University Gazette, October 4. Cambridge, MA.)