Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet was an Australian virologist. He won a Nobel Prize in 1960 for predicting acquired immune tolerance. His major achievements included discovering the causative agents of Q-fever and psittacosis. Modern methods for producing influenza vaccines are still based on Burnet’s work improving virus growing processes in hen’s eggs.
About Macfarlane Burnet in brief

Mac disapproved of Frank and saw him as a hypocrite who espoused moral principles and put on a facade of uprightedness, while associating with businessmen of dubious ethics. He did not enjoy his time at Geelong College, one of Victoria’s most exclusive private schools, and found his fellow students to be arrogant and boorish. He attended Sunday school at Terang State School, where the priest encouraged him to pursue academic studies and awarded him a book on ants as a reward for his academic studies. He also joined the Scouts in 1910 and enjoyed all outdoor activities. While living in Terang, he began to collect beetles and study biology. He read biology articles in the Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, which introduced him to the work of Charles Darwin. The Burnets moved to Terang in 1909, when Frank was posted to be the bank manager there, having declined a post in London. He went on to conduct pioneering research in immunology at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, and served as director of the Institute from 1944 to 1965. From 1965 until his retirement in 1978, Burnet worked at the University of Melbourne. In 1913 he was the only boarder with a full scholarship with a scholarship. He later became a member of the Australian Academy of Science, and was its president from 1965 to 1969.
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