"One day in the spring of 1954, J.
Robert Oppenheimer ran into Albert Einstein outside their offices at the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. Oppenheimer had been the
director of the Institute since 1947 and Einstein a faculty member since he
fled Germany in 1933. The two men might argue about quantum physics — Einstein
grumbled that he just didn’t think that God played dice with the universe — but
they were good friends.
Oppenheimer took the occasion to
explain to Einstein that he was going to be absent from the Institute for some
weeks. He was being forced to defend himself in Washington, D.C., during a secret hearing against charges
that he was a security risk, and perhaps even disloyal. Einstein argued that
Oppenheimer “had 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.” Oppenheimer demurred, saying he could
not turn his back on America. “He loved America,” said Verna Hobson, his
secretary who was a witness to the conversation, “and this love was as deep as his
love of science.”
“Einstein doesn’t understand,”
Oppenheimer told Ms. Hobson. But as Einstein walked back into his office he
told his assistant, nodding in the direction of Oppenheimer, “There goes a narr
[fool].”
Einstein was right. Oppenheimer was
foolishly subjecting himself to a kangaroo court in which he was soon stripped
of his security clearance and publicly humiliated. The charges were flimsy, but
by a vote of 2 to 1 the security panel of the Atomic Energy Commission deemed
Oppenheimer a loyal citizen who was nevertheless a security risk: “We find that
Dr. Oppenheimer’s continuing conduct and association have reflected a serious
disregard for the requirements of the security system.” The scientist would no
longer be trusted with the nation’s secrets. Celebrated in 1945 as the “father
of the atomic bomb,” nine years later he would become the chief celebrity
victim of the McCarthyite maelstrom.
Oppenheimer may have been naïve, but
he was right to fight the charges — and right to use his influence as one of
the country’s pre-eminent scientists to speak out against a nuclear arms race.
In the months and years leading up to the security hearing, Oppenheimer had
criticized the decision to build a “super” hydrogen bomb. Astonishingly, he had
gone so far as to say that the Hiroshima bomb was used “against an essentially
defeated enemy.” The atomic bomb, he warned, “is a weapon for aggressors, and
the elements of surprise and terror are as intrinsic to it as are the
fissionable nuclei.” These forthright dissents against the prevailing view of
Washington’s national security establishment earned him powerful political
enemies. That was precisely why he was being charged with disloyalty.
It is my hope that Christopher
Nolan’s stunning new film on Oppenheimer’s complicated legacy will initiate a
national conversation not only about our existential relationship to weapons of
mass destruction, but also the need in our society for scientists as public
intellectuals. Mr. Nolan’s three-hour film is a riveting thriller and mystery
story that delves deeply into what this country did to its most famous
scientist.
Sadly, Oppenheimer’s life story is
relevant to our current political predicaments. Oppenheimer was destroyed by a
political movement characterized by rank know-nothing, anti-intellectual,
xenophobic demagogues. The witch-hunters of that season are the direct
ancestors of our current political actors of a certain paranoid style. I’m
thinking of Roy Cohn, Senator Joseph McCarthy’s chief counsel, who tried to
subpoena Oppenheimer in 1954, only to be warned that this could interfere with
the impending security hearing against Oppenheimer.
After America’s most celebrated
scientist was falsely accused and publicly humiliated, the Oppenheimer case
sent a warning to all scientists not to stand up in the political arena as
public intellectuals. This was the real tragedy of Oppenheimer. What happened
to him also damaged our ability as a society to debate honestly about
scientific theory — the very foundation of our modern world.
Quantum physics has utterly
transformed our understanding of the universe. And this science has also given
us a revolution in computing power and incredible biomedical innovations to
prolong human life. Yet, too many of our citizens still distrust scientists and
fail to understand the scientific quest, the trial and error inherent in
testing any theory against facts by experimenting. Just look at what happened
to our public health civil servants during the recent pandemic.
We stand on the cusp of yet another
technological revolution in which artificial intelligence will transform how we
live and work, and yet we are not yet having the kind of informed civil
discourse with its innovators that could help us to make wise policy decisions
on its regulation. Our politicians need to listen more to technology innovators
like Sam Altman and quantum physicists
like Kip Thorne and Michio Kaku.
Oppenheimer was trying desperately
to have that kind of conversation about nuclear weapons. He was trying to warn
our generals that these are not battlefield weapons, but weapons of pure
terror. But our politicians chose to silence him; the result was that we spent
the Cold War engaged in a costly and dangerous arms race.
Oppenheimer did not regret what he
did at Los Alamos; he understood that you cannot stop curious human beings from
discovering the physical world around them. One cannot halt the scientific
quest, nor can one un-invent the atomic bomb. But Oppenheimer always believed
that human beings could learn to regulate these technologies and integrate them
into a sustainable and humane civilization. We can only hope he was right.”
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