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University of California Press

Atomic Fragments

A Daughter's Questions

by Mary Palevsky (Author)
Price: $52.95 / £45.00
Publication Date: Jun 2000
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 303
ISBN: 9780520220553
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 21 b/w photographs
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Chapter2

Edward Teller, High Priest of Physics

On December 1, 1995, I traveled to Stanford University to meet with Edward Teller at the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, where he is a senior research fellow. Left to my own devices, I would not have attempted to interview Teller. I am from a liberal background, and his name held many negative associations for me, from the matter of J. Rober

About the Book

More than most of us, Mary Palevsky needed to come to terms with the moral complexities of the atomic bomb: Her parents worked on its development during World War II and were profoundly changed by that experience. After they died, unanswered questions sent their daughter on a search for understanding. This compelling, sometimes heart-wrenching chronicle is the story of that quest. It takes her, and us, on a journey into the minds, memories, and emotions of the bomb builders.

Scientists Hans Bethe, Edward Teller, Joseph Rotblat, Herbert York, Philip Morrison, and Robert Wilson, and philosopher David Hawkins responded to Palevsky's personal approach in a way that dramatically expands their previously published statements. Her skill and passion as an interlocutor prompt these men to recall their lives vividly and to reexamine their own decisions, debating within themselves the complex issues raised by the bomb.

The author herself, seeking to comprehend the widely differing ways in which individual scientists made choices about the bomb and made sense of their work, deeply reconsiders those questions of commitment and conscience her parents faced. In personal vignettes that complement the interviews, she captures other remembrances of the bomb through commemorative events and chance encounters with people who were "there." Her concluding chapter reframes the crucial moral questions in terms that show the questions themselves to be the abiding legacy we all share. This beautifully written book bridges generations to make its readers participants in the ongoing dialogue about science and philosophy, war and peace.

About the Author

Mary Palevsky directs the Nevada Test Site Oral History Project at UNLV.

Table of Contents

Preface 
Acknowledgments 

Prologue 
Broken Vessel 
Chapter 1 Hans A. Bethe, Tough Dove 
A Thousand Cranes 
Chapter 2 Edward Teller, High Priest of Physics 
Martyrs to History? 
Chapter 3 Philip Morrison, Witness to Atomic History 
Pacific Memories I
Chapter 4 David Hawkins, Chronicler of Los Alamos 
Pacific Memories II 
Chapter 5 Robert R. Wilson, the Psyche of a Physicist 
Professor Bethe at Home in His Office 
Chapter 6 Joseph Rotblat, Pugwash Pioneer 
The Old Country 
Chapter 7 Herbert F. York, Inside History 
Outsider History 
Running to Ground Zero 

EPILOGUE Mosaic 
The Problem of Power 
The Bohr Phenomenon 
Being God or Seeing God? 
An Atomic Scientist's Appeal 
What Science Is and What Science Makes 
Life Understood Backward 
Farewell 

Notes 
Selected Bibliography 
Sources of Illustrations 
Index 

Reviews

"Mary Palevsky has thrown new light on the history of the atomic age by recording the thoughts and memories of leading actors in the drama before they are all gone." —Freeman Dyson, author of The Sun, the Genome, and the Internet: Tools of Scientific Revolutions

"The author's quest for insight into her parents' lives has genuine emotional appeal. She is sensitive and careful--ready to change her mind, reshape her approach. The result is a narrative that is honest and suspenseful. We know these questions will not have answers, but we remain fascinated with the attempt to resolve them."—Ruth Lewin Sime, author of Lise Meitner: A Life in Physics

"An eloquent volume. Mary Palevsky has stimulated the greatest of the bomb builders to think and speak in new ways about the nuclear weapons they created and their meaning for mankind."—Priscilla Johnson McMillan, Davis Center, Harvard University

"She is a very remarkable young woman, a help to all of us. I call her our ethnographer, visiting this strange tribe, befriending them, learning much from them, helping them!"—David Hawkins, interviewee. Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, the University of Colorado

“A timely approach to the great and controversial issues that arise from the creation of the atomic bomb. Her interviews are both extensive and penetrating, persistent yet sympathetic.” —Emily Morrison