Just when we knew we had it all figured out ....
Take for example the newest 2018 Nobel Prize winner in medicine, Jim Allison.
"But despite the mounting mockery of the larger scientific community and dwindling research funds, a handful of immunotherapy researchers continued to believe—and continued searching, decade after decade, for the missing piece of the cancer immunity puzzle, a factor that prevented the immune system from recognizing and attacking cancer cells."
“New” aspects of the immune system, like the hunter-killer T-cells, were barely on the radar yet (Allison’ s college professor thought they were “too weird” evolutionarily to really exist).
“I'd go and Xerox big stacks of shit and then read it,” he says. He was looking to better understand the T cell receptor. But what Allison was reading in the academic journals didn’t really make sense to him.
“Yeah, when that happens, the fact that it doesn't make sense is either their fault or your fault,” Allison laughs. Naturally, his first assumption was that it was his fault. “I'd think, ‘I'm an idiot. I can't understand this.’” Allison says. “Then, I thought, ‘No, they're idiots. They don't understand what they're talking about!’” Then he’d drive back out to the library and copy another stack.
All the reading and wondering came together one night while Allison was in Houston sitting in on a lecture by a visiting Ivy League immune researcher. Something just clicked. “I said, 'I think I know a shortcut to finding the T-Cell receptor. Suddenly it seemed so obvious: ...."