American Prometheus Highlights
Apr 19
April 19th, 55241
Wolfgang Pauli began to refer to quantum mechanics as Knabenphysikââboysâ physicsââbecause the authors of so many of these papers were so young. In 1926, Heisenberg and Dirac were only twenty-four years old, Pauli was twenty-six and Jordan was twenty-three.
loc. 1317-1319
Born agreed, and argued that the outcome of any quantum experiment depended on chance. In 1927, Einstein wrote Born: âAn inner voice tells me that this is not the true Jacob. The theory accomplishes a lot, but it does not bring us closer to the secrets of the Old One. In any case, I am convinced that He does not play dice.â
loc. 1326-1329
The relentless patter of his voice was interrupted only by puffs on his cigarette. Every so often, he would twirl toward the blackboard and write out an equation. âWe were always expecting him,â recalled one early graduate student, James Brady, âto write on the board with it [the cigarette]
loc. 1692-1694
The Oppenheimer brothers spent hours in the saddle together, talking. âI think we probably rode about a thousand miles a summer,â Frank Oppenheimer recalled. âWeâd start off very early in the morning, and saddle up a horse, sometimes a packhorse, and start riding. Usually weâd have some new place that we wanted to go, often where there was no trail, and we really knew the mountains, the Upper Pecos, the surface of the whole mountain range.
loc. 1655-1658
âOppenheimerâs work with Snyder is, in retrospect, remarkably complete and an accurate mathematical description of the collapse of a black hole,â observed Kip Thorne, a Caltech theoretical physicist. âIt was hard for people of that era to understand the paper because the things that were being smoked out of the mathematics were so different from any mental picture of how things should behave in the universe.â
loc. 1837-1840
But one cannot aim to be pleasing to women, any more than one can aim to have taste, or beauty of expression, or happiness; for these things are not specific aims which one may learn to attain; they are descriptions of the adequacy of oneâs living. To try to be happy is to try to build a machine with no other specification than that it shall run noiselessly.â
loc. 1888-1891
He particularly liked Hemingwayâs The Sun Also Rises.
loc. 1962-1963
Robert was reading the Bhagavad-Gita. âIt is very easy and quite marvelous,â he wrote Frank. He told friends that this ancient Hindu textââThe Lordâs Songââwas âthe most beautiful philosophical song existing in any known tongue.â Ryder gave him a pink-covered copy of the book which found its way onto the bookshelf closest to his desk. Oppie took to passing out copies of the Gita as gifts to his friends.
loc. 2020-2023
In 1938 another reformer, Culbert L. Olson, a Democrat, was elected governor with the open support of the state Communist Party. Olson had campaigned under the slogan of a âunited front against fascism.â
loc. 2276-2277
As for so many on the left, the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War was a turning point for Chevalier.
loc. 2356-2357
By turning against the Soviet Union, Oppenheimer argued, Hitler had âdestroyed at one stroke the dangerous fiction, so prevalent in liberal and political circles, that fascism and communism were but two different versions of the same totalitarian philosophy.â Now communists everywhere would be welcomed as allies of the Western democracies. And that was a development both men thought was long overdue.
loc. 2941-2944
He was reading Marx, but he was also reading the Bhagavad-Gita, Ernest Hemingway and Sigmund Freudâand, in those years, the last was grounds for expulsion from the Party.
loc. 2991-2992
The most relevant political fact about Robert Oppenheimer was that in the 1930s he was devoted to working for social and economic justice in America, and to achieve this goal he chose to stand with the left.
loc. 3004-3005
Kitty and Robert were temperamentally poles apart. âHe was gentle, mild,â recalled one friend who knew them both. âShe was strident, assertive, aggressive. But thatâs often what makes a good marriage, the opposites.â
loc. 3220-3222
...kept Peter for not one but two full months, until Kitty and Oppenheimer returned for the fall semester. This rather unusual arrangement, however, may have had long-term consequences for mother and child. Kitty never properly bonded with Peter. Even a year later, friends noticed that it was always Robert who took them into the babyâs room and showed him off with obvious pride and delight. âKitty seemed quite uninterested,â said this old friend.
loc. 3252-3255
He perceived three drawbacks to Oppenheimerâs selection. First, the physicist lacked a Nobel Prize, and Groves thought that fact might make it difficult for him to direct the activities of so many of his colleagues who had won that prestigious award. Second, he had no administrative experience. And third, â[his political] background included much that was not to our liking by any means.â
loc. 3671-3673
Rabi had fundamental doubts about the whole notion of building a bomb. âI was strongly opposed to bombing ever since 1931, when I saw those pictures of the Japanese bombing that suburb of Shanghai. You drop a bomb and it falls on the just and the unjust. There is no escape from it. The prudent man canât escape, [nor] the honest man.
loc. 4076-4078
Rabi also gave a less practical but more profound reason for not joining: He did not, he told Oppenheimer, wish to make âthe culmination of three centuries of physicsâ a weapon of mass destruction.
loc. 4082-4083
Only one thing mattered now to Oppenheimer: building the weapon before the Nazis did.
loc. 4088-4089
Their colleagues soon nicknamed Feynman âThe Mosquitoâ and Bethe âThe Battleship.â
loc. 4196-4197
When Hans Bethe suggested everyone would benefit from a weekly open-ended colloquium, Oppenheimer immediately agreed.
loc. 4231-4232
Richard Feynman, an incorrigible practical joker, had his own way of dealing with security regulations. When the censors complained that his wife, Arline, now a patient at a tuberculosis sanatorium in Albuquerque, was sending him letters in code and asked for the code, Feynman explained that he didnât have the key to itâit was a game he played with his wife to practice his code-breaking. Feynman also drove security personnel to distraction when he went on a nighttime safecracking spree, opening the combination locks for secret file cabinets all over the laboratory. On another occasion, he noticed a hole in the fence surrounding Los Alamosâso he walked out the main gate, waved to the guard, and then crawled back through the hole and walked out the main gate again. He repeated this several times. Feynman was almost arrested. His antics became part of Los Alamos lore.
loc. 4441-4447
let him read a letter Bohr had written to Franklin Roosevelt. Oppie obviously set great store by the precious document. According to Hawkins, âthe implication was that Roosevelt had fully understood. And this was a great source of joy and optimism....Itâs interesting. We all lived under this illusion, you see, for the rest of the time
loc. 5303-5305
Hawkins recalled thinking to himself that it was too lateâthe men at Los Alamos âwere committed to building a bomb regardless of German progress.â
loc. 5347-5348
But in the autumn of 1943, Oppenheimer brought the Princeton mathematician John von Neumann to Los Alamos, and von Neumann calculated that implosion was possible, at least theoretically. Oppenheimer was willing to bet on it.
loc. 5396-5398
We did have a pretty intense discussion of why it was that we were continuing to make a bomb after the war had been [virtually] won.â
loc. 5562-5563
Oppenheimer had drafted a eulogy of three short paragraphs. âWe have been living through years of great evil,â he said, âand great terror.â And during this time Franklin Roosevelt had been, âin an old and unperverted sense, our leader.â Characteristically, Oppenheimer turned to the Bhagavad-Gita: âMan is a creature whose substance is faith. What his faith is, he is.â
loc. 5610-5613
â...that we could not give the Japanese any warning; that we could not concentrate on a civilian area; but that we should seek to make a profound psychological impression on as many of the inhabitants as possible.â
loc. 5729-5731
Stimson said he agreed with James Conantâs suggestion âthat the most desirable target would be a vital war plant employing a large number of workers and closely surrounded by workersâ houses.â Thus, with such delicate euphemisms, did the president of Harvard University select civilians as the target of the worldâs first atomic bomb.
loc. 5731-5733
In early June 1945, several members of the committee produced a twelve-page document that came to be known as the Franck Report, after its chairman, the Nobelist James Franck. It concluded that a surprise atomic attack on Japan was inadvisable from any point of view: âIt may be very difficult to persuade the world that a nation which was capable of secretly preparing and suddenly releasing a weapon as indiscriminate as the [German] rocket bomb and a million times more destructive, is to be trusted in its proclaimed desire of having such weapons abolished by international agreement.â
loc. 5751-5755
recommended a demonstration of the new weapon before representatives of the United Nations, perhaps in a desert site or on a barren island.
loc. 5755-5756
Truman never saw the Franck Report; it was seized by the Army and classified.
loc. 5757-5757
Among other things, he was unaware that military intelligence in Washington had intercepted and decoded messages from Japan indicating that the Japanese government understood the war was lost and was seeking acceptable surrender terms.
loc. 5808-5810
According to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, when he was informed of the existence of the bomb at the Potsdam Conference in July, he told Stimson he thought an atomic bombing was unnecessary because âthe Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasnât necessary to hit them with that awful thing.â
loc. 5826-5828
No one can be certain of Oppenheimerâs reaction had he learned that on the eve of the Hiroshima bombing, the president knew the Japanese were âlooking for peace,â and that the military use of atomic bombs on cities was an option rather than a necessity for ending the war in August. But we do know that after the war he came to believe that he had been misled, and that this knowledge served as a constant reminder that it was henceforth his obligation to be skeptical of what he was told by government officials.
loc. 5847-5850
the petition urged President Truman not to use atomic weapons on Japan without a public statement of the terms of surrender: â. . . the United States shall not resort to the use of atomic bombs in this war unless the terms which will be imposed upon Japan have been made public in detail and Japan knowing these terms has refused to surrender. . . .â
loc. 5852-5854
the Bhagavad-Gita; Hinduism, after all, has its trinity in Brahma the creator, Vishnu the preserver, and Shiva the destroyer.
loc. 5895-5896
âWe knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried. Most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita; Vishnu is trying to persuade the prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, âNow I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.â I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.â One of Robertâs friends, Abraham Pais, once suggested that the quote sounded like one of Oppieâs âpriestly exaggerations.â
loc. 5993-5997
Instead of an open and frank discussion of the nature of the weapon, Truman coyly confined himself to a cryptic reference: âOn July 24,â Truman wrote in his memoirs, âI casually mentioned to Stalin that we had a new weapon of unusual destructive force. The Russian premier showed no special interest. All he said was that he was glad to hear it and hoped we would make âgood use of it against the Japanese.â
loc. 6044-6047
Instead of an open and frank discussion of the nature of the weapon, Truman coyly confined himself to a cryptic reference: âOn July 24,â Truman wrote in his memoirs, âI casually mentioned to Stalin that we had a new weapon of unusual destructive force. The Russian premier showed no special interest. All he said was that he was glad to hear it and hoped we would make âgood use of it against the Japanese.â â This fell far short of what Oppenheimer had expected. As the historian Alice Kimball Smith later wrote, âwhat actually occurred at Potsdam was a sheer travesty.
loc. 6044-6048
On August 14, Radio Tokyo announced the governmentâs acceptance of this clarification and, therewith, its surrender. The war was overâand within weeks, journalists and historians began to debate whether it might have ended on similar terms and around the same time without the bomb.
loc. 6113-6114
and soon he began to disparage it as a scientific achievement. âWe took this tree with a lot of ripe fruit on it,â Oppenheimer told a Senate committee in late 1945, âand shook it hard and out came radar and atomic bombs.
loc. 6194-6195
uttered another of those regrettable remarks that he characteristically made under pressure. âMr. President,â he said quietly, âI feel I have blood on my hands.â
loc. 6389-6390
On this occasion he had had the opportunity to impress the one man who possessed the power to help him return the nuclear genie to the bottleâand he utterly failed to take advantage of the opportunity.
loc. 6402-6403
Trumanâs interactions with scientists were never elevated. The president struck many of them as a small-minded man who was in way over his head. âHe was not a man of imagination,â said Isidor Rabi.
loc. 6412-6413
However confident Americans might be that their views and ideas will prevail, the absolute âdenial of the views and ideas of other people, cannot be the basis of any kind of agreement.â
loc. 6451-6452
Someone had given her a copy of his farewell speech.
loc. 6461-6461
Even the FBI recognized that Pinskyâs questionââShall we claim him as a member?âââappears to leave some doubt as to the Subjectâs [Oppenheimerâs] actual membership in the Party.â
loc. 6482-6483
The White House and the State Department did nothing with Hooverâs wiretaps. But Hoover pushed his agents to continue.
loc. 6491-6492
Soon afterwards, Oppenheimerâs reportâwhich became known as the Acheson-Lilienthal Reportâwas submitted to the White House.
loc. 6600-6601
Once again demonstrating his political perspicacity, Oppenheimer predicted, accurately as it happened, how the whole process would unfold: âThe American disposition will be to take plenty of time and not force the issue in a hurry; that then a 10â2 report will go to the [Security Council] and Russia will exercise her veto and decline to go along. This will be construed by us as a demonstration of Russiaâs warlike intentions. And this will fit perfectly into the plans of that growing number who want to put the country on a war footing, first psychologically, then actually. The Army directing the countryâs research; Red-baiting; treating all labor organizations, CIO first, as Communist and therefore traitorous, etc. . . .â
loc. 6671-6676
âWhat do we do if this effort in international control fails?â Oppie pointed out the window and replied, âWell, we can enjoy the viewâas long as it lasts.â
loc. 6697-6698
Moscowâs diplomats instead proposed a simple treaty to ban the production or use of atomic weapons.
loc. 6700-6701
An early opportunity for a good-faith effort to prevent an uncontrolled nuclear arms race between the two major powers had been lost.
loc. 6705-6706
An early opportunity for a good-faith effort to prevent an uncontrolled nuclear arms race between the two major powers had been lost. It would take the terrors of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, and the massive Soviet buildup that followed it, before an American administration would propose, in the 1970s, a serious and acceptable arms control agreement. But by then tens of thousands of nuclear warheads had been built. Oppenheimer and many of his colleagues always blamed Baruch for this missed opportunity. Acheson angrily observed later, âIt was his [Baruchâs] ball and he balled it up. . . . He pretty well ruined the thing.â Rabi was equally blunt: âItâs simply real madness what has happened.â
loc. 6705-6710
that if there is another major war,â he wrote in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists on June 1, 1946, âatomic weapons will be used. . . .â This meant, he argued, that the real task at hand was the elimination of war itself. âWe know this because in the last war, the two nations which we like to think are the most enlightened and humane in the worldâGreat Britain and the United Statesâused atomic weapons against an enemy which was essentially defeated.â
loc. 6723-6726
AT THIRTY-FOUR seconds after 9:00 a.m. on July 1, 1946, the worldâs fourth atomic bomb exploded above the lagoon of Bikini Atoll, a part of the Marshall Islands in the Pacific Ocean.
loc. 6738-6740
When Strauss had pressed Einstein to describe the ideal kind of man for the job of director, he had replied, âAh, that I can do gladly. You should look for a very quiet man who will not disturb people who are trying to think.â
loc. 6955-6957
toward Robert had by then become one of outright enmity,
loc. 7047-7048
He nevertheless reluctantly agreed that while Oppenheimer âmay at one time have bordered upon the communistic, indications [were] that for some time he [had] steadily moved away from such a position.â
loc. 7079-7080
the view that Oppie was ânot capable of genuine originality, but that he is very good at comprehending other peopleâs ideas and seeing their implications.â
loc. 7219-7220
Johnny von Neumann was almost as interested in ancient Roman history as he was in his own field.
loc. 7285-7286
why the great man was working indefatigably to develop a âunified field theoryâ to replace what he saw as the inconsistencies of quantum theory. It was lonely work, and yet he was still quite satisfied to defend âthe good Lord against the suggestion that he continuously rolls the diceââhis thumbnail critique of Heisenbergâs uncertainty principle, one of the foundations of quantum physics.
loc. 7342-7345
By the nature of their discipline, mathematicians invariably do their best intuitive work in their twenties or early thirtiesâwhereas historians and other social scientists often need years of studious preparation before they became capable of genuinely creative work.
loc. 7448-7450
Oppenheimerâs former teacher at Harvard, Professor Percy Bridgman, told a reporter, âScientists arenât responsible for the facts that are in nature. . . . If anyone should have a sense of sin, itâs God. He put the facts there.â
loc. 7518-7519
Years later, Oppenheimer claimed wryly that, âThe government paid far more to tap my telephone
loc. 7843-7843
Years later, Oppenheimer claimed wryly that, âThe government paid far more to tap my telephone than they ever paid me at Los Alamos.â
loc. 7843-7844
he and the committeeâs majority advised against an accelerated program to build the H-bomb on the grounds that such a weapon was neither necessary as a deterrent nor beneficial to American security.
loc. 8162-8163
In short, Kennan believed that it had been compelling strategic considerations, rather than the American atomic monopoly, which had deterred a Soviet invasion of Western Europe in the years 1945â49.
loc. 8268-8270
By the end of the decade, Americaâs stockpile of nuclear weapons would leap from some 300 warheads to nearly 18,000 nuclear weapons. Over the next five decades, the United States would produce more than 70,000 nuclear weapons and spend a staggering $5.5 trillion on nuclear weapons programs.
loc. 8313-8315
âI never forgave Truman,â
loc. 8316-8316
FOR NEARLY five years, Oppenheimer had tried to use his prestige and status as a celebrity scientist to influence Washingtonâs growing national security establishment from the inside. His old friends on the left, men like Phil Morrison, Bob Serber and even his own brother had warned him that this was a futile gamble. He had failed in 1946, when the Acheson-Lilienthal plan for international control over atomic bombs was sabotaged by President Trumanâs appointment of Bernard Baruch. And now, once again, he had failed to persuade the president and members of his Administration to turn their back on what Conant had described to Acheson as âthe whole rotten business.â The Administration now supported a program to build a bomb 1,000 times as lethal as the Hiroshima weapon. Still, Oppenheimer would not âupset the applecart.â He would remain an insiderâ albeit one who was increasingly outspoken and increasingly suspect.
loc. 8340-8347
Kennan agreed with Oppenheimer that nuclear weapons were inherently evil and genocidal: âIt should have been visible to people at the time that this was a weapon from which nobody stood to gain. . . . The whole idea that you could achieve anything of a positive nature by the development of these weapons seemed to me preposterous from the start.â
loc. 8357-8360
there was a great deal of discussion about targets in the Soviet Union, and how many [bombs] it would take to knock out the major industrial centers. . . . At the time, we thought 50 would just about wipe out the essential things in the Soviet Union.â DuBridge always thought that was a pretty good estimate. But over time, the Pentagonâs representatives kept finding pretexts to push the number higher.
loc. 8388-8391
Three weeks later, the United States exploded a 10.4-megaton thermonuclear bomb in the Pacific, vaporizing the island of Elugelab.
loc. 8744-8745
rethink basic assumptions about the early Cold War. The âenemy archives,â as the historian Melvyn Leffler has written, demonstrate that the Soviets âdid not have pre-conceived plans to make Eastern Europe communist, to support the Chinese communists, or to wage war in Korea.â Stalin had no âmaster planâ for Germany, and wished to avoid military conflict with the United States.
loc. 8775-8778
In the very near future, he said, âwe may anticipate a state of affairs in which the two Great Powers will each be in a position to put an end to civilization and life of the other, though not without risking its own.â
loc. 9000-9002
Again and again, Oppenheimer observed that he was barred from speaking of the essential factsâand then like a Brahmin priest endowed with special knowledge, he proceeded to reveal the most fundamental secret of allâthat no country could expect in any meaningful sense to win an atomic war.
loc. 8998-9000
The initiation of Straussâ campaign to destroy Oppenheimerâs reputation can thus be precisely dated; it began on the afternoon of May 25, 1953, with his appointment with the president.
loc. 9040-9041
OPPENHEIMERâS âcandorâ speech was published on June 19, 1953, in Foreign A fairs, having been cleared for publication by the White House.
loc. 9069-9070
the prestigious Reith Lectures, a series of four talks broadcast to millions of people around the world.
loc. 9197-9198
With the exception of this last chargeâdelaying the hydrogen bombâs developmentâall of this information had been reviewed previously and discounted by both General Groves and the AEC. With the full knowledge of these facts, Groves had ordered the Army to give Oppenheimer his security clearance in 1943, and the AEC had renewed it in 1947 and thereafter.
loc. 9416-9418
The inclusion of Oppenheimerâs opposition to the Super reflected the depth of McCarthyite hysteria that had enveloped Washington. Equating dissent with disloyalty, it redefined the role of government advisers and the very purpose of advice.
loc. 9418-9420
In Straussâ view, neither Oppenheimer nor his lawyer had any of the ârightsâ afforded to a defendant in a court of law; this was an AEC Personnel Security Board Hearing, not a civil trial, and Strauss was going to be the arbiter of the rules.
loc. 9472-9473
When an FBI agent in Newark suggested discontinuing the electronic surveillance on Oppenheimerâs home âin view of the fact that it might disclose attorney-client relations,â Hoover refused.
loc. 9482-9483
when Oppie returned to the car, he told her, âEinstein thinks that the attack
loc. 9573-9573
when Oppie returned to the car, he told her, âEinstein thinks that the attack on me is so outrageous that I should just resign.â
loc. 9573-9574
Einstein argued that Oppenheimer âhad no obligation to subject himself to the witch-hunt, that he had served his country well, and that if this was the reward she [America] offered he should turn his back on her.â
loc. 9574-9575
But Oppenheimer could not turn his back on America. âHe loved America,â Hobson later insisted. âAnd this love was as deep as his love of science.â
loc. 9577-9578
Einsteinâs instincts were rightâand time would demonstrate that Oppenheimerâs were wrong.
loc. 9583-9584
âThis was the shock of the day,â Ecker recalled, âand the shock of the case, because the classical notion of the legal system is the tabula rasa.
loc. 9629-9630
In a court of law, such evidence would be unacceptable and dismissed as double hearsayâthird parties recounting what they heard from others about a defendant. But
loc. 9684-9686
But as chairman of the board, Gordon Gray could have ensured that the hearing was conducted properly and fairly. He did not do his job.
loc. 10419-10420
The Gray Board was, in sum, a veritable kangaroo court in which the head judge accepted the prosecutorâs lead.
loc. 10424-10425
Strauss became frantic when he learned of this development. He and Robb had wiretapped Oppenheimerâs lawyers, they had blocked Garrisonâs attempt to get a security clearance, they had ambushed witnesses with classified documents, they had prejudiced the Gray panel with hearsay evidence from the FBI filesâand despite all their efforts to assure a guilty verdict, now it seemed possible that Oppenheimer would be exonerated.
loc. 10458-10461
They apparently were aware of his associations and his left-wing policies: yet they cleared him. They took a chance because of his special talents and he continued to do a good job. Now when the job is done, we are asked to investigate him for practically the same derogatory information. He did his job in a thorough and painstaking manner. There is not the slightest vestige of information before this Board that would indicate that Dr. Oppenheimer is not a loyal citizen of his country. He hates Russia. He had communistic friends, it is true. He still has some. However, the evidence indicates that he has fewer of them than he had in 1947. He is not as naĂŻve as he was then. He has more judgment; no one on the Board doubts his loyaltyâ even the witnesses adverse to him admit thatâand he is certainly less a security risk than he was in 1947, when he was cleared. To deny him clearance now for what he was cleared for in 1947, when we must know he is less of a security risk now than he was then, seems hardly the procedure to be adopted in a free country. . . . I personally think that our failure to clear Dr. Oppenheimer will be a black mark on the escutcheon of our country. His witnesses are a considerable segment of the scientific backbone of our Nation and they endorse him.
loc. 10495-10504
At the end of their lunch, Smyth said, âLewis, the difference between you and me is that you see everything as either black or white and to me everything looks gray.â
loc. 10571-10572
OPPENHEIMERâS SECURITY CLEARANCE was thus rescinded just one day before it was due to expire.
loc. 10590-10591
Einstein, disgusted, quipped that henceforth the AEC should be known as the âAtomic Extermination Conspiracy.â
loc. 10593-10593
Strauss persuaded his fellow commissioners to have all 3,000 typewritten pages of the hearing transcript published by the Government Printing Office. This violated the Gray Boardâs promise to all the witnesses that their testimony would remain confidential.
loc. 10595-10597
IN THE LONG RUN, however, Straussâ strategy backfired; the transcript revealed the inquisitorial character of the hearing, and the corruption of justice during the McCarthy period. Within four years, the transcript would destroy the reputation and government career of Lewis Strauss.
loc. 10606-10608
AT THE APEX of the McCarthyite hysteria, Oppenheimer had become its most prominent victim. âThe case was ultimately the triumph of McCarthyism, without McCarthy himself,â the historian Barton J. Bernstein has written.
loc. 10629-10630
guess there is no doubt that Robert did do some fibbing, and in the public mind now anybody who fibbed and also once was a âCommunistâ is clearly an unforgivable character.â
loc. 10649-10650
âScientists and administrators such as Edward Teller, Lewis Strauss, and Ernest Lawrence, with their fullthroated militarism and anti-communism, pushed American scientists and their institutions toward a nearly complete and subservient devotion to American military interests.â
loc. 10662-10664
âThey paid more to tap my phone than they paid me to run the Los Alamos Project.â
loc. 10681-10681
On St. John, the father of the atomic bomb had somehow found just the right refuge from his inner demons.
loc. 11124-11125
At the top of the list was Baudelaireâs Les fleurs du mal, and then came the Bhagavad-Gita . . . and last was Shakespeareâs Hamlet.
loc. 11141-11142
of the Senate, and said of the late physicist, âLet us remember not only what his special genius did for us; let us also remember what we did to him.â
loc. 11414-11415