I Am Not Doctor Strangelove 150
Amoeba Protozoa writes "Here is an amusing and well written interview with Edward Teller, atomic science history's own real-life Dr. Strangelove." It's in Scientific American. And at one point, Teller threatens to throw the interviewer out of his office if he mentions Dr. Strangelove "three more times."
Re:Real scientists don't read Scientific American (Score:1)
Re:Real scientists don't read Scientific American (Score:1)
It's true that most of their articles are harmless, but a couple of stinkers like that per issue makes me wonder about the articles I'm not qualified to judge.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:4)
How crazy was Project Chariot? Consider the fact that Bikini Atoll [bikiniatoll.com] is now one of the best sites for skin diving and sport fishing on the planet. (Read that as "lots of shipwrecks in pristine condition" and a nearly-undisturbed environment for the past 40 years.) The most serious radiological contaminant on Bikini is Cs-137, and the main reason it's a problem is because the local vegetation picks it up in place of potassium. It's a land problem, not a sea problem. Since a putative Alaskan harbor isn't a likely site for crop-growing, and since it would have been excavated with high-yielding thermonuclear devices designed to maximize explosive yield and minimize heavy radionuclide production, the residual radiation levels around the site would have dropped to habitable levels relatively quickly. (Of course, whether it would have cooled off in time to be economically viable compared to conventional construction, or even whether or not a harbor would have benefited the Alaskan economy is a question for economists, not physicists :)
IMHO the best use for nuclear explosions would have been Project Orion [islandone.org]; a nuclear pulse engine. Another cool project killed by the ignorance of the public when it comes to things nuclear.
Teller has every right to be bitter. It appears from the article that many people are unable to separate the man from the device he helped build. In an age in which the public is so frightened of the word "nuclear" that they argue to ban space probes like Cassini due to their RTGs, and in which people prefer the cyanide in apricot pits to chemotherapy "because it's the natural way to fight caner", it's not surprising that Teller's vision of the application of technology to build a better world is viewed as hubris, and his contributions are held in low esteem.
Back to nukes. Anyone interested in the history of atomic weaponry should consider a visit to the National Atomic Museum [atomicmuseum.com] in New Mexico. The timing is great - the first weekend of October also marks the date on which White Sands Missile Range opens up the Trinity Site [oz.net] to the general public, allowing tours of the site of the first fission explosion.
Finally - whatever your opinions on the horror of the bomb's use - the physics [fas.org] behind it was still beautiful. Anyone wanting more detailed information on the design is highly encouraged to read Carey Sublette's Nuclear Weapons FAQ [milnet.com] - a 14-part document also available at the FAS High Energy Weapons [fas.org] archive.
Re:Teller and Strangelove (Score:1)
Quick Anecdote (Score:1)
"A while back I was invited to a strange, but nevertheless interesting party. At this party there were all sorts of people from various professions. During the course of the evening, one very buxom woman came up to me and introduced herself. It turns out that she was a well-known stripper and actress in adult movies by the name of Candi Samples. When she found out that I studied physics she asked whether I knew a guy by the name of Dick Feynman. "Yes," I replied,. I must admit I was rather astonished to hear his name in this connection. "He is one of my biggest fans..." she said.
A few days later I am in Feynman's office and we are talking when I say to him, "Hey, I ran into an interesting acquaintance of yours at a party the other night. Her name is Candi Samples."
Feynman immediately smiled and said, "Hey, Al, look at this!" He went over to his file cabinet, which I thought contained all of his most important and intellectual works. It didn't take him long to pull out a black and white autographed nude shot of Candi Samples, inscribed, "To Big Dick, Love from Candi!" "
:) (Score:1)
little stories like that were the reason why i like "surely, you must be joking ..." very much.
now i'm hunting some more books about R.P.F.
Re:Teller knew the Commies for what they were. (Score:1)
However I seem to have wondered OT a bit here, what I was really trying say was that you can't fight a war without civilian casualties. If you believe that you are even more stupid than people that think communism work. Particularly when you throw thermo-nuclear weapons into the mix.
Furthermore I just loathe the (generally) American attitude that communism is the devil and root of all evil. Communism in itself isn't too be blamed more than christianity or democrazy for the bad things that have been done in their respective "names". Nazism is a different issue since it is based on anti-semetism. And for the record I personally use to debunk communists and "new-liberalist" in my surroundings for their naïve thinking, so it's not like I agree with communism.
It does however seem as if we can agree on that Teller is a crazy old man. And that we should all be happy that his kind didn't get all of their ideas through. I just get so tired of all the "you would all be speaking Russian if it weren't for us!" attitudes that are predominant amongst them. Playing on people's fears should be a capital punishment when the entire world is at stake in your little game.
Re:You Are Ignorant (Score:2)
The H-bomb, however, is an altogether different issue. It was developped after WW2 was won. It uses an atomic bomb as a trigger. The H-bomb never needed to exist other than a show of paranoia and power during the Cold War.
There's a large margin between Openheimer and Teller. Openheimer opposed the H-bomb's development, and Teller denounced him as a Communist. This goes to show what kind of man Teller is.
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
And when Sagan is on the topic I think most people will agree that he has certainly ended up on positive karma. Or do you think it was because of faked results or poor predictions (Global weather is something we still can't simulate very accurately.) that the thouchdown spot for Sojourner was named after him?
What's sick about making thermo-nuclear weapons? What do you think? No matter which country "won" that war humanity would most likely be better off speaking Russian. And considering the mentality of many politicians I don't doubt that some would be capable of launching even if they knew the situation was hopeless "Just because the other guys shouldn't win!" That may be appropriate behaviour in a sandbox. But hardly so on this scale.
Finally, all nations have done atrocities in name of what they thought to be the truth. Do you think that the Soviet thought of themselves as the bad guys? Don't you think they also had some "save the world" motive? Or perhaps the US government patented that? All countries and societies have done horrible things, but when you are actually *proud* of it it get's really sad.
Re:Teller knew the Commies for what they were. (Score:1)
Nope. Old, yes. Crazy? Not hardly.
And that we should all be happy that his kind didn't get all of their ideas through. I just get so tired of all the "you would all be speaking Russian if it weren't for us!" attitudes that are predominant amongst them.
Tough. If it weren't for people like us,you would be speaking Russian. For you, it
would have no doubt been a very educational, if somewhat lethal, experience.
Playing on people's fears should be a capital punishment when the entire world is at stake in your little game.
It's only a game when you get to sit on the sidelines and let other people carry the burden.
This will no doubt be moderated down as flamebait,but the fact is that the Western
democracies and their authoritarian allies won, and the Soviets lost bigtime. No thanks to you,
and people like you who can't seem to recognize evil when you see it.
Science... :P (Score:1)
You mean to tell me that if you see a drop of water, you can't imagine an ocean. Socratic exploration of science is irresponsible.
Are you going to tell me that if I measure 1 cm and 1 more cm and I find I get 2 cm and 1 more for 3 cm, I'm going to have to check 3cm + 1cm = 4 cm.
How is it people can't abstract? I'm amazed.
We already knew what was possible before it was built.
How shallow can you get?
Sad really (Score:3)
But scientists have a very real obligation to help politicians wisely evaluate the consequences of scientific and technological breakthroughs. You can't make the H-bomb go away, but you can help control its use and production intelligently.
When I hear of plans of h-bombing a new harbor into Alaska, to "mainline" it's economy, I have to think Teller is speaking as an expert in fields he knows next to nothing about. Bad advocacy -- creates two sorts of idiot -- those who are frightened of any use of nuclear energy, and those who really think it's a good idea to H-Bomb Alaska.
Once we get into space, nuclear energy is likely to become much more useful. Without the high concentrations of people around reactors, risks are far less in comparison to benefits. Easy disposal of waste in the Sun makes it more attractive yet. Even bombs may well be truly useful tools for excavating or moving asteroids.
Teller is nothing new in science. Someone who has truly contributed a lot to a difficult field, but whose opinions outside his field are somewhat inflammatory, if not arrogant. His work will be greatly appreciated next century, but his abrasive personality has cost him acceptance in his own lifetime.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
And not only did he partake in the development of the thermo-nuclear bomb, he was one of the major forces behind it. Using the everpopular "If we don't they will" mentality. Basically I think the world would be better off without any people like that, it's just a sick attitute.
And when you say that "...Another cool project killed by the ignorance of the public when it comes to things nuclear...." I think it should be pointed out that many other leading scientists have a very justified fear of nuclear weapons, irregardless of their uses. It's not only the "ignorant masses". If that was the case then you would have your nice glowing bay in Alaska today. (And hey, you would get a tan on both sides of your body when you lie at the beach there, that would be geat, wouldn't it?)
I trust people that say "It's perfectly safe" about as much as people that claim "This will hurt me more than you".
So, what are the alternatives? (Score:1)
Moderator note: I consider this article to be at least a bit about scientific journalism, so I believe this to be an on-topic question.
When I was 5, my parents bought me a subscription to ScienceX, where X is the set of current years, and contained at least 76, 77, 78. It was a great magazine, and sufficiently beyond my understanding (hey, I was 5!) that it made me want to learn about all of the new ideas I was exposed to.
I currently subscribe to Wired and SIGACTNews, but barely have time to read them - let alone many other magazines. So, as much as I dislike it, I haven't had a good science magazine in about 10 years.
What's out there now? I'm getting ready (well, s/I'm/Mywifeis/, actually) to have a child, and I'd like to get something nice and meaty to dig into, but which preferably doesn't require a postgrad degree in math or physics. To clarify, I'm a computer science guy. I have at least a basic understanding of higher math and physics, but don't find it relaxing or enjoyable to dig through the minutae. Plus, I'd like something for my kid to read that could have the same effect that ScienceX had on me.
Any suggestions, Gentle Reader?
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:2)
I doubt this very much.
Nuclear excavating may actually have been a good idea. However, I have never read any numerical reports of how much fallout there would be from the cleanest H-bomb. If it is really low enough that humans could live on the new shore line immediatly afterwards with only modestly higher background radiation, then the only thing stopping us is fear of misuse. (Note that i am defining modestly higher as an increase that could be found by moving to an area with natural sources of increased background radiation.)
Re:Teller knew the Commies for what they were. (Score:1)
---
In addition, it was quite possible to fight communism effectively without 'killing children'. For example, the MX missile could find a target to an accuracy of 100 yards. This made it easy to choose specifically military targets.
Yes, it worked real well in both Saudi-arabia and now lately in Bosnia, didn't it? I'm not proposing that you should believe everything that was blamed on NATO bombs, but some reports where apparently accurate. ("Err, sorry China.") And furthermore what do you do when you have a hospital or school on top of a bunker? Bit of a tricky situation woudn't you say? Don't think that will happen? Think again, war is war, if you don't do everything to win, you will lose.
And if you do fight a nuclear war there will be tons of civilian casualties. (Hiroshima, Nagasaki) It's some bloody big bombs you are talking about here, designed to wipe out cities, keep that in mind would you? (And if you feel that nuclear weapons shouldn't be used then I don't see how it can work in defence of Mr. Teller.)
And second, you seem horrified that "cummunism killed a lot of people". Does the fact that indians were killed during the US's early history make democrazy a bad idea? Or perhaps we should kill off all religious people, Christianity did after all torture more people to death than the total number of casualties during WWI and WWII. And that's just one religion.
Finally there is nothing inherently wrong with communism, it's just too optimistic about human nature. The fact that Stalin was a crazy bastard isn't really something you can blame on communism.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
The US also had plans to use nukes to make a sea level canal through Nicaragua, and I've seen late 50's pro nuclear educational videos that discussed using a nuclear blast to blow a new ground level, i.e.. flat, pass through the Rocky Mountains for a highway.
Who was Strangelove? (Score:1)
alt.movies.kubrick FAQ
SciAm (Score:1)
Dr Strangelove (Score:1)
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Re:Science... :P (Score:1)
My mistake. Water is massless.
... (Score:3)
--
Teller still tries to defend the hydrogen bomb. (Score:4)
The Soviets built a hydrogen bomb only because they knew the US was doing the same. While it's possible that building up a vast arsenal to wipe out all life may indeed have been the reason for the USSR's collapse, "vindicating" Teller's observation that we would all be speaking Russian and he would be in a concentration camp, it still seems that there could have been a more effective way to win the cold war then build up a vast arsenal capable of wiping us all out many times over.
And the threat isn't over yet.
Personally, I got the impression Teller was suffering in part from cognitive dissonance in an attempt to justify that his life wasn't completely wasted.
"The bomb WAS good."
"I thought of it, not Ulam."
"Alaska would be much improved if we blew up half a dozen hydrogen bombs just off shore."
Perfectly understandable. (Score:1)
In some way, the ideas could be said to be Teller.
Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:2)
The article seems to make him sound like a crackpot obsessed with the power of the nuclear weapons he worked with, trying to use them for everything from geographical engineering to defense. The project chariot thing really disturbed me, though. If the account at the link above is true, then I worry that maybe he is a crazy scientist.
On the other hand, maybe this was his way of coping with a truly awful weapon that he had a hand in creating. Finding a successful peaceful use might make him feel better.
Sujal
taking things out of context (Score:2)
The man is 92 years old, in his heyday the Bomb was considered a great way to convert a small amount of matter into a large amount of energy, and it does that pretty well.
Any endeavor requiring large amounts of energy could possibly be converted to nuclear power. So he wanted to use bombs for excavating a bay, it's not all that crazy considering the time and place in which it was suggested (1958).
This man saved the free world, and saying "someone else would have done it sooner or later" is quite probably true -- but it may well have been a russian or german, and we'd all be dead, or at least never born. If you don't believe that, your school tought you some shitty history, go find some WW2 vets and ask them about it before they die.
The next 50 years should be pretty exciting. China has already sated publicly that they are going to take what we have, so let's hope our genetics research accelerates faster than theirs.
There may be a genetic war on the horizon, and if one side has to win while the other loses, it might as well be the West than wins, rather than the commies.
History repeating itself? nah....
Re:The nuclear command/control system (Score:1)
Teller earned his place in history (Score:5)
References:
Rhodes, Richard. Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. 1995. Simon and Schuster.
Rhodes, Richard. The Making of the Atomic Bomb. 1986. Simon and Schuster. Pulitzer Prize winner. A great book.
Goodchild, Peter. J. Robert Oppenheimer: Shatterer of Worlds. 1985. Fromm International Publishing Corp.
Re:Sad really (Score:1)
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
You can't quote Carl sagan and still be taken seriously. Have you ever heard of the TTAPS study? It faked speculative climactic results of a nuclear exchange. It was the work of Sagan (the 'S' in TTAPS) and some other left-wing scientists. (Of course, the idiots at SciAm bought the whole sack of bullshit.) It turns out they skewed a bunch of variables in their model to make the results come out the way they wanted. Ever the fool, he was heard before the Persian Gulf War, using the same faked model to predict global cooling as a result of oil fires in Kuwait and Iraq. It would be generous to have called him a crank
The point is, Sagan was always one to put his ideological agenda before scientific truth. He was a fraud on this, and other occasions.
Using the everpopular "If we don't they will" mentality...it's just a sick attitute.
Why is it sick? It was certainly true. The Soviets were always trying to lull the West into complacency, and then they'd strike out unexpectedly and do things like... put missiles in Cuba, invade Afghanistan, invade central America (through their Sandanista proxies in Nicaragua), and spawn Marxist revolutions in Africa (Angola, Ethiopa) and Asia (North Vietnam). If you are under any illusions about the imperial nature of Soviet Communism, then you must've learned history from Soviet textbooks. Ask any citizen of Hungary or Poland about it - they'll be glad to tell you.
Thank You! (Score:1)
you hear your neighbor's door crash down, you know they did nothing, you've known them for years, but they are dragged kicking and screaming to a gulag, never to be seen again. If you say anything, or even look out your door, you go too.
This is a documented method of communist control -- mnipulating populations into sheep through fear, picking families at random for prosecution and imprisonment.
China uses "Block Captains" everywhere, they "monitor" the "cells" for "unusual behavior", which is reported back to the police. The suspects are rounded up and placed in hospitals for "reeducation".
Many posters are ragging on Teller. They have no clue what fear is, having been coddled their entire lives by western liberalism, and politically correct history books edited by some wacko history professor in the mid-seventies.
I grew up with people from Rumania, they told me of their friends who were killed in the name of control.
Note that the right-wing ultra conservatives are more than capable of the same behavior. Central America, anyone? Guatamala?
The history books are getting oh-so-clean nowadays, and many of the posters here lapped it up like a kitten drinks a saucer of cream.
Notice how quickly Russia has "detained" 11,000 people in the wake of the terrorist bombings? Seems rather efficient, old habits die hard, I guess.
Re:I met him once... (Score:1)
For those interested in the ethics of science, I would strongly recommend finding anything written or presented by the late Jacob Brownowski.
He was a leading military mathematician who visitied Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the bombs to study aftermath. He returned as a profoundly changed man, and pioneered a new field of ethics in science. His television series _The Ascent of Man_ is an amazing account of our history encompassing science, art and the human condition; and builds strong case for ethics in the practice of science. If you get the chance, see it. It will probably change your life.
You can find out about the companion book at amazon [amazon.com].
He was a great man. It would have been interesting to see what Brownowski and Teller would have said to each other if they were in the same room.
- James.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
sure some things can wipe us out (like DNA tempering, nuclear reactions, ...). but banning such projects can cause just grater probability of such dead result.
we should not ban research. we have to pay attention at who researches such things (and how).
like any other information: information is not good or bad. the use of such information can be good or bad.
A certain inevitability (Score:1)
The thing is that just about any immoral/self-destructing/bad-for-the-world scheme can be justified when there's fear involved. Ideas like Project Chariot (or draining the Mediterranean to make farmland, or... the list goes on) all have one thing in common: they're boldly outlandish, potentially helpful to humans, but we don't fear what might happen if we don't do them.
The H-bomb was invented because of our fear of Communism. If the thought of fusion never occurred (which is unlikely), then it might just as well have been a giant A-bomb on giant rockets. Think of all the other outlandish ideas which failed. H-bombs just happened to work.
Disclaimer: I don't agree with Teller's politics at all; I'm just trying to make some observations of the world in general.
use of nuclear power (Score:1)
there were a lot of ideas
for example richard p. feynman comes with nuclear airplane.
while talking about richard p. faynman: there is a book with his memories. it is very good while it is funny and it teach something at the same time.
You Are Ignorant (Score:1)
Japanese culture demands death before surrender. Ever heard of Iwo Jima? Not even japanese soil, and they would not surrender until the very end. Japan is just a bit larger than Iwo, wouldn't you say?
Enjoy your fake history all you want, there was no serious blackade plan. It was "Surrender, or be invaded", and the bomb let the Japanese surrender in the face of its might.
Even the Japanese leadership admitted they would not have surrendered, thus forcing a terrible land invasion, were it not for the Bomb.
Teller is a hero of the free world. He saved countless Japanese, American and allied citizens from a terrible death fighting on Japanese soil.
Truman made the right decision, there was no other choice but a massive death toll on all sides.
Wasted Interview. (Score:1)
That article makes me proud that I've only bought 4 or 5 SA magazines this decade. I used to by 9 or 10 a year, but they started filling the front and back of the mag with left-wing Globalist-Socialist editorial rants. Occasional reviews at the grociery store reveal that it has only gotten worse. They've ruined a once-great American Intitution.
Re:Hello neutron bomb (Score:1)
Well, yes and no. The determining factor in the amount of radioactive fallout generated by a multi-stage thermonuclear device and the duration of its persistence is primarily the material used in the tamper surrounding the final fusion fuel and fissile sparkplug. If the tamper is constructed of a fissile material (e.g., enriched uranium), then the fission of the sparkplug and fusion burn of the compressed final stage fuel can be significantly augmented by fission of the tamper itself, to the point where the majority of the device's energy is from fission, not fusion. In such a case, a good deal of fallout is generated from this tamper fission.
If the tamper is not fissile (e.g., contructed of tungsten), then the device can be designed so that the majority of the energy comes from the fusion burn (although the total yield will be less without the contribution of the fission of the tamper.) In such a case, it is possible to make a themonuclear device that will have minimal and shortlived radiative aftereffects.
If, on the other hand, you salt the tamper with materials (e.g., Cobalt-59) that will generate highly radioactive and persistent fallout when they absorb neutrons from the final stage detonation, then you can create some truly nasty dirty bombs -- sufficient even to wipe out all life on earth.
Finally, a "neutron" bomb is designed to not contain the high speed neutrons from either the primary or later stages of a device (and thus it cannot have a fission reaction in a tamper and is of comparatively low yield), but to allow them to escape early from the bomb casing. Beside their intended anti-personnel effect, these neutrons will also have a variety of radiative effects on bombarded materials. Some of these effects (such as on steel armor) can be of fairly long duration.
In any event, a neutron bomb still has to have at least a primary fission component, so I rather suspect that it is impossible to build one that only has sufficient explosive yield to destroy a car.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
The author also didn't mention that the DoD and DARPA funded the "robust North California economy" and not the other way around.
And I'm suprised at the ignorance of history here; noone has yet mentioned the real-life inspiration of Dr. Strangelove: Robert McNamara.
Re:I met him once... (Score:1)
I mean, in the case of nuclear research in general, the long term moral worth of nuclear power, for example, is a lot harder to qualify than nuclear weapons research. Should people have researched nuclear power? If not, how far back would you stunt the research, given a chance? Would you deny any nuclear research at all, including such things as Positron Emission Tomography, an occasionally vital medical tool?
I hope I'm not drifting too far off-topic with this -- although I don't think general scientists' morality (as opposed to scientific morality, of which Teller might be justified in getting huffy about the suggestion) can be off-topic when you're talking about the Father of the Bomb -- but surely any scientist is, at the same time as being a scientist, a human being and must therefore be responsive to the morality of his situation?
Possibly not: many jobs require the employee to withhold e.g. compassion, or pity. Or does morality stand apart from that, as a fundamental way in which we can ever be part of a race, not merely a society?
(Of course, I have chosen a DPhil on the cooling of ions in quantum computers, which at least for now holds no ethical problems unless you're against the wilful confinement of innocent calcium ions...)
Re:Thank You! (Score:1)
And those 11,000 people were Moscow's visitors and it's completely legal to be able to detain them from the capital (I'm not saying it's good but it's perfectly legal).
And Russia isn't living in horror.. in poverty - yes but not horror.
Next time, know more what you talk about.
Re:So, what are the alternatives? (Score:1)
For the younger enthusiast, there's the weekly Science News.
Discover and Popular Science are the scientific equivalent of People. OK for kids, I suppose.
Don't bother with any of the nonjournal chemistry rags. Chemical and Engineering News, for example, is only useful if you want to read badly written hagiography about executives at chemical corporations.
If you're really looking for meatier material, I suggest Science and Nature. They have a mix of science gossip, generalist articles, and specialist articles. If you feel you don't have the background to read the specialist articles, read the lighter stuff for a year--you'll be surprised at what you pick up. And don't bother inquiring about their overpriced subscriptions, just go to your local college library.
Re:Sad really (Score:1)
Feynman's Opinion? (Score:1)
Re:A certain inevitability (Score:1)
One must remember that Laventia(sp) Beria ran the Soviet atomic bomb project during the Stalin years. He was not going to wait around for the US to build one first.
Even without the espionage it would only have been a few years until they can up with the idea of staged ignition.
We also have to remember that fission bombs can only grow so far. They basically top out at about 700 Kt. Whereas fusion bombs have no pratical limits.
Re:Science... :P (Score:2)
> We already knew what was possible before it was built.
So? (I assume your argument is that the decision to build was wrong because building things that go BOOM is Morally Naughty for sufficiently-loud values of BOOM :-)
Suppose that the Pentagon had looked forward and decided not to build - or that the physicists at the Manhattan Project had forseen the destructive power of such a device and "gone on ethical strike", perhaps by pretending not to have figured out the theories of radiation hydrodynamics that ultimately became the Teller-Ulam device?
Do you honestly believe that Stalin, (being the wonderfully-enlightened pacifist we know him to be from his historical record), would have made the same abstraction, and decided not to direct his scientists to build it?
Teller's sense of "build it first, let the ethicists worry about what to do with it later" may offend you, but IMHO his judgement with respect to the Soviet regime's intentions at the start of the Cold War was bang-on.
A deeper question: If Teller was wrong in his support for development of the H-Bomb to counter a perceived Soviet nuclear weapons development threat, was Einstein wrong when he wrote his famous letter (Page 1 [atomicmuseum.com] and Page 2 [atomicmuseum.com]) to Roosevelt in August of 1939, prompting the Manhattan Project as a counter to a possible Nazi bomb? It's not because we were at war with the Nazis - World War II wouldn't start for another month.
Bias in the article (Score:1)
The author, Gary Stix, seems to have an all-too-common bias to his writing: peace-loving hippies good, hard-headed scientist bad. This can be entertaining, even endearing, when applied to relatively trivial subjects, but here it comes off as biased, naive, and peevish.
The Cold War was the conflict of the century, and Teller played a pivotal role. The world was at stake, literally. Stix is either innocent about whether the world would be better off with Soviet domination or Edward Teller, or he is outright wrong in his preference.
In his remarks about hubris, Stix shows himself to be one of the small-is-beautiful gang, opposed to any plan that might mean digging a big hole or generating a lot of energy. Apart from being narrow-minded, this point of view is ignorant of history. It is likely that our grandchilderen will have machines that make our industry look as if we are hauling coal out of mines with donkeys. Unless we consider things that appear on the surface as "hubristic," we will miss opportunities to give succeeding generations better lives.
Overall, the article is a huge missed chance to create a significant historic document.
You should've worked it out on paper (Score:2)
There's no such thing as a spiral orbit; barring perturbations from third bodies, all orbits follow conic sections (ellipses, circles, parabolas, hyperbolas) around the center of mass of the system. To send something into the sun, you need to put it into an elliptical orbit whose perihelion will be inside the sun's radius... which basically means killing most of it's initial velocity.
If you figure you're already in orbit around a planet, you can probably get a free couple miles per second by boosting on the right half of your orbit, and maybe you can do a gravity assist or two... but most of the 25 miles per second delta V you'd need to send something into the sun would have to come from your own engines.
But who wants to send nuclear waste into the sun anyway? If you've got cheap spaceflight, pick a spot on the moon, dump or bury it all there, and forget about it. It won't hurt anybody, and it'll be useful someday.
Re:You should've worked it out on paper (Score:2)
Yeah, but September 13, 1999 has already come and gone.
Re:I met him once... (Score:1)
(Of course, I have chosen a DPhil on the cooling of ions in quantum computers, which at least for now holds no ethical problems unless you're against the wilful confinement of innocent calcium ions...)
Actually, I can think of one definite problem. Quantum computers can be used to factor numbers much more quickly that normal computers. If I remember correctly, the time to factor a number using Shor's aloroithm is O(n) with respect to the number of bits in the number. By comparison, I think the fastest current method using a classical computer (i.e, the one in front of you) is O(2^n^(1/3)). The complexities might be wrong, but the point is that a quantum computer is faster by orders of magnitude.
The point of all of this is that a working quantum computer could be used to used to factor a large number relatively quickly. Since many modern public-key (and probably others; I'm a bit ignorant at some of this) encryption methods use prime numbers, privacy would take a bigger hit that any of the recent moves against it.
If that's not an ethical issue, I don't know what is...
-ElJefe
Well... (Score:1)
Communism is WAY too optimistic about human nature, IMHO. Which actually does make it inherently wrong, at least as a form of government. Maybe "wrong" isn't the correct word, "useless" fits better.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
> Basically I think the world would be better off
> without any people like that, it's just a sick attitute.
In terms of game theory, I viewed the Cold War as a high-stakes game of Prisoner's Dilemma. The optimal strategy in PD is tit-for-tat. If your opponent doesn't defect, neither should you. If your opponent does defect, you should respond on the next turn with a defection. Reinforce good behavior with good behavior, and bad with bad. Eliminating your ability to defect - and telegraphing this elimination to your opponent in advance of a game of PD - is poor strategy indeed when you have reason to believe your opponent won't be as high-minded as you.
Let the truth be known, I agree with you - the world would be a better place without the "If we don't they will" people. (Of course, it'd also be a better place if cold beer ran from my faucets instead of water, spammers were nonexistent, the Feds had a clue on crypto and privacy issues, and if Bill Gates had spent less time studying and more time partying in high school.)
Unless you've developed a mechanism for detecting and eliminating "if we don't they will" people on both sides of an incipient technological arms race (if you do have such a mechanism, activate it now before they find out about it! :), I'm afraid both sides will continue to need them.
Re:A better place indeed, Not! (Score:1)
In spite of the revisionist history in the Sci Am article, the Cold War was won by Star Wars. The Russian economy was not capable of sustaining an equivalent program and that is what caused the downfall of the Soviet Union - they knew that they could not match the US in such a development. The Apollo lunar program is what gave the US the credible possibility of achieving such a program (assuming it was technically feasible).
Now, it's true that what made the work on Star Wars possible was the US' free market economy and the electronic industry in California and elsewhere. But it's possible to argue that the US economy would not have been capable of that development if it were not for the 40 (mostly) peaceful years they were blessed with since the end of WWII. Although I don't want to belittle the war experiences of anybody in Vietnam or Korea, let's face it, 50 thousand US casualties in Vietnam are minor compared to the millions in WWI, WWII or the deaths that would have occurred in a confrontation between the free West and the Soviets.
So the question is "Would just the atomic bomb have been sufficient as a deterrent to keep the Cold War cold for as long as it did, or was the orders of magnitude greater power of the hydrogen bomb necessary?". Either way, the Star Wars program, advocated by Teller and the President's Advisory Council on Science and Technology (including Jerry Pournelle, and many members of the scientific and military communities), is what delivered the final uppercut to Soviet Communism.
Re:Bias in the article (Score:1)
The survey issues (where they collect articles from the last few years on a given topic) like the ones on space missions or biotech are still worth buying as general starter reference but that's it. Haven't seen one in a while though, maybe the signal to noise ratio has gotten so bad the publishers are having a problem finding enough wheat among the chaff.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Re:Sad really (Score:1)
LetterRip
Weapons (Score:1)
1. Those who want weapons to control other people.
2. Those who want weapons to defend themselves against the first group.
3. Those who want nothing to do with weapons.
I despise the first group, respect the rights of the second group, and try to ignore the whining of the third group.
The fact that you are in the third group does not make the first group go away. It just makes you dependent on the second group.
There are people in the world who want what you have. They are willing to hurt or kill you. Saying that they don't exist does not make them go away. Wishful thinking is a poor defense strategy.
Sci Am comments (Score:1)
This article makes some definite value judgments about Edward Teller and his acomplishments. If the article was objective, then I could understand the moderation as offtopic. However, since the article does make value judgments, is it offtopic to submit it (and by extension the magazine that elected to publish it) to similar value judgments? I think not.
Perhaps one of the permanent moderators is concerned about the legal liability of slashdot. I don't think it applies in this case since it is possible to establish a history of articles in SA articles that make similar value judgments or ad-hominem attacks. This is a legitimate assessment of a magazine which purports to present objective scientific information, or objective reporting on the history of science.
Worthless fluff from Political American (Score:1)
how many were ramblings of the author? I used to
find Scientific American interesting, but this is
just another example of fluff wrapped around the
barest hint of an interview.
Re:Teller still tries to defend the hydrogen bomb. (Score:1)
You bet! Nukes saved millions of lives. (Score:1)
The Japenese were training their civilans to man the beaches with spears and axes for gods sake! Which would have been better, to mow down millions 'armed' civilians with artilary and machine guns, or the nuclear weapons?
Regardless, in terms of raw total damage, the firebombing of Tokyo did much more damage than the nuclear fireballs did.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Re:The nuclear command/control system (Score:1)
Try some other Museums (Score:1)
If you want to see a really good nuclear weapon museum, then I strongly recommend the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. It shows what happens after the big boom. After I visited that one, I couldn't eat lunch. The only museum that matches the one in Hiroshima for impact is the Holocaust Museum in DC.
BTW, other ppl that worked on the A- and H-bombs have afterwards done okay in the eyes of the public. Bethe, Fermi, Ulam, Sakharov, and von Neumann to name a few. However, Teller blinded by his immense hatred and mistrust of the Ruskies has used his position to espouse a philosphy of fear and loathing. There is a fairly old book, The Legacy of Hiroshima, that Teller wrote about 40 yrs ago. Worth reading if you can find it. It is a cold war classic.
Re:Real scientists don't read Scientific American (Score:1)
Besides, on the whole, it was just an entertaining article: worth the read just to be able to quote Teller as saying, "'I am not Dr. Strangelove!'"
I would hope for most people that they don't care if Scientific American is read by, "real scientists," but that they get all the entertainment and content out of it to justify the cover-price or their subscription rate. Why let peer pressure influence your decision? It is your mind: fill it with whatever you want.
-AP
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Re:Teller still tries to defend the hydrogen bomb. (Score:1)
Teller (Score:1)
I never thought of him as Dr. Stranglove...but now I will always think of him like that.
Teller and Strangelove (Score:2)
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Let us not forget that brilliance in one area doesn't necessarily imply it in other areas. He may have been a top-notch nuclear physicist, but I'd say he'd have made a lousy civil engineer or environmental scientist.
Re:...Edward Teller (Score:1)
Teller knew the Commies for what they were. (Score:1)
It seems Teller was lucky to have had such strong formative experiences in Hungary, seeing that fascist and communist regimes were so abhorrent and morally indistinguishable that they must both be fought at all costs.
A better place indeed (Score:1)
So, no, Teller hasn't brought the world anything worthwhile except fear, paranoia and a god complex. It would indeed have been a better place without him.
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Re:Teller and Strangelove (Score:1)
Re:Science... :P (Score:1)
If all I've ever seen are drops of water, there is no way I could imagine an ocean, let alone understand an ocean.
Re:Hello neutron bomb (Score:1)
Induced radiation (from the neutron flux) can last several weeks. However, the effected area is quite small.
A bigger worry in the modern world is what effect such bombs would have on tanks and other vehicles using depleted uranium armor...
Another brilliant scientist totally out of touch. (Score:1)
It sounds to me like Teller's socio-political world view was totally defined by a couple of events relating to the Fascists, the Communists, and both of them mistreating his father. Which just goes to show that people whose world views are formed by catastrophic circumstances become either inherently conservative (if the circumstances they are in are OK... like Isreal right now) or revolutionary (if the circumstances they are in suck... like Lebanon for the past 20 years).
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Teller has every right to be bitter. It appears from the article that many people are unable to separate the man from the device he helped build. In an age in which the public is so frightened of the word "nuclear" that they argue to ban space probes like Cassini due to their RTGs, and in which people prefer the cyanide in apricot pits to chemotherapy "because it's the natural way to fight caner", it's not surprising that Teller's vision of the application of technology to build a better world is viewed as hubris, and his contributions are held in low esteem.
Teller has no right to be bitter; he was ostracized (and rightly so) by the scientific community for YEARS.
Read about Oppenheimer, and you'll generally find Teller in the background, interested only in his own status and power. The man played petty politics under the guise of "science", and apparently is still doing so.
McCarthyism shouldn't be forgotten so soon.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
The Rand institute applied game theory models for years to the super-power race. The whole reason for nuclear subs is to insure the "tit" ability, that is, retaliatory attack.
Otherwise, first-strike ability could wipe you out before you had a chance to respond.
Great books on the subject are Power's "Prisoner's Dilemma", and the fictional David's Sling.
Re:Teller knew the Commies for what they were. (Score:1)
What incidents are you referring to with regards to missile accuracy vis-a-vis Saudi Arabia and Bosnia? As for what happened with the Chinese embassy in Serbia, your snide comment is off-base -- the missile accurately did what it was supposed to do, which was to hit that specific building.
Also, your comments relating Communism with the U.S. killing of Indians are unwarranted, and you know it. Every country has some dark moments in its history, whether it's the U.S. killing Indians, England's treatment of the Irish, or slavery, that enlightened people today find hard to imagine a mindset that would make such things completely acceptable back then. The fact is, though, that during the time of the Cold War, the United States government was no longer engaged in policies of killing Indians, while Communist countries throughout the world were still actively engaged in oppressing their own people and killing or jailing those who dare speak up against such policies.
While I do think that your post is wrong-headed, I disagree with the lazy moderator who, instead of taking the effort to explain why he obviously didn't agree with you, simply and wrongly marked your post as "flamebait."
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
Re:Sad really (Score:1)
As to your other point...there really isn't any reason to send nuclear waste into the sun. Not only is it seriously hard to GET to the sun, nuclear waste is almost always useful for some purpose. Plus you have a huge ammount of empty storage space available in which to stash it until it's needed. So just stick it in solar orbit somewhere, then you can at least go get it again if you want at some future date,
Re:Sci Am comments (Score:1)
Exploring this contrast between jouranlism as a profession and journalism as it is practised on the Web, with Slashdot as a prime example, is clearly worthwhile. The failings of the artictle on Teller are illustrative of a wider malaise. And the data provided by the well-articulated criticisms in this discussion are a keen diagnosis of what is wrong. Let's have more of it!
Re:Sad really (Score:1)
I've read a little bit about Orion, and after you get over the shock it's a very interesting plan. It's the thought of using it for taking off from the Earth's surface that most people find objectionable, and reasonably so. I'm not sure the plan's authors ever claimed that was wise, only possible, but you can't expect media to report a story like that straight!
You thought Project Chariot was odd? (Score:1)
I can't find my copy of the book (yes, I do have a copy here somewhere), but my favorite one was the proposed "new Canal," to replace the Panama Canal. The idea was to evacuate a few hundred thousand people from a hundred-mile wide stretch of Nicaragua, then set off a couple of hundred thermonuclear bombs, digging a hundred-yard wide trench across Central America.
Not to mention, of course, "make a new pass in the mountains near Needles, California, to cut thirty miles off of the route of Interstate 40." This one almost got adopted. The Mojave Indians might have objected, but what the hey...
Re:Hello neutron bomb (Score:1)
As others have mentioned, the radiation doesn't magically dissapear either, tho it might decrease faster than a regular fission bomb.
Re:Bias in the article (Score:1)
The two are not mutually-exclusive.
-AP
Re:Bias in the article (Score:1)
Teller is a brilliant man (Score:4)
And if you're so concerned about nuclear weapons, here's a thought: nuclear weapons have saved far, far, more lives than they have taken. The only time they were actually used in combat was at the end of WWII, and while it is true that many were killed, and actual invasion would have cost many more lives on BOTH sides. And the conflict between the US and the Soviet Union were caused by political differences, not nuclear weapons. Nuclear weapons are the reason it was a COLD war, if it wasn't for nuclear weapons it may very well have been WWIII between the two most powerful nations in the world. The death toll would have made WWII look like a day in the park.
Scary... (Score:1)
Real scientists don't read Scientific American (Score:2)
This article is typical modern solipsistic journalism. We get to hear about the author's own memories of the Cold War, and his musings as he walks down the street (is this why I would read SciAm?). Then there is the obligatory that-building-is-phallic comment about some tower at the Hoover Institute. (I'm glad to see our author took Psych 101 - 'Half-Assed Fruedian Commentary For The Poorly-Educated'. I wish that Isidore I. Rabi had instead mused that 'It would have been a better world without Freud')
The most absurd part of this article is the suggestion that the USSR lost the Cold War because the US makes Macintoshes, biotech, and Pentium computers. The Soviets could never compete with America's electronic weaponry he says, forgetting that a handful of Soviet ICBM's could wipe California off the planet. Teller was working to make that less likely. The Soviets never needed to surpass the US technologically, they just needed sufficient technology, which they happily stole.
This journalist doesn't know his ass from a Nuclear Crater in the ground.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:2)
Then when you think of something like nuclear excavating, it sounds like an absolutely insane idea. You think of fallout, radiation contamination, etc.. Teller's job for a good portion of his career was to make nuclear bombs more dangerous and more deadly. There are bombs with low radiation and very low fallout, there are also bombs that use special isotopes (salt bombs) that have less explosive power but have extended levels of radiation and fallout that lasts for milleniums. We probably have bombs now that have such diminised radioactive effects that you couldn't tell if it was nuclear or conventional the next day. We already know that these nuclear weapons were built, we just don't know how many (look at the w70 warhead.) At that point, you're practically excavating with TNT, aren't you? It's still not a very comfortable idea, I certainly don't want them doing that anywhere near me, but I don't think Teller was insane.
He's just got a much different perspective, we've been raised to believe everything nuclear is evil. He made a career out of harnessing the power of it all. Are you convinced that there is absolutley no peaceful use of nuclear weapons? I respect for at least trying to find some.
Re:...Edward Teller (Score:1)
Authorship of hydrogen bomb (Score:2)
I'd recommend book by Richard Rhodes Dark Sun: The making of Hydrogen Bomb to everyone interested.
Re:Teller knew the Commies for what they were. (Score:1)
Um, excuse me, but. . .so what?
In war, absolute victory is the only option, or else don't bother to fight--you'd just be wasting lives to no good end (see Vietnam for a perfect example of this--and IMOHO, we should never have gotten involved in that situation in the first place). The object of war is to kill as many of the enemy as you can--men, women and children--until they surrender. The idea that there can be "laws" of war or "rules of conduct" is a sham--war is just organized slaughter that must be conducted as ruthlessly as possible until one side or the other is victorious. To believe otherwise is just limp-wristed self deceit.
Re:Plain wrong (Score:1)
Lemme put this straight --
Now, if you're the Japanese leadership, you've got a choice here.
While those who understand the psychology of Americans realize that #3 would have worked best, anyone who understands the psychology of 1930's-40's Japan can see that #4 is the most likely response.
Now, despite all that, I think the destruction of both Hiroshima and Nagasaki was justified on both military and humanitarian grounds, and that the U.S. government of 1941-45 was morally superior to the Japanese government of the same time period that practiced the horrible atrocities in East Asia.
However, don't tell me Japan instigated the U.S.-Japanese conflict in 1941. FDR was doing everything he could to drag the U.S. people into WWII. Discussing joint war aims in 1940 with Churchill, giving Britain free weaponry, impounding Axis ships and assets, and blowing up German vessels on the Atlantic didn't work -- but FDR finally found something that did.
Re:Genius or crazy scientist? (Score:1)
Of course we worked with nasty regimes during the Cold War. We worked with Stalin during WWII -- was that an endorsment of Communism? The enemy of my biggest enemy is my friend, no matter how nasty. Note U.S. pressure switched directions in 1990 in Chile, El Salvador, Angola, etc. -- when the Soviets left, we did, too.
Chomsky's left-wing anti-corporate fixation aside, the reason the U.S. hated Castro during the Cold War was that he was a Soviet ally. The reason we "hate" him now is that the Cuban expat vote is important in Florida and Florida is important to Presidential campaigns, and there isn't a big pro-Castro vote anywhere in the U.S.
Politicians care about those Cuban expat votes. They don't give a damn about any principle, and certainly nobody gives a damn about what somebody nationalized forty years ago, except a handful of people who court John Birch Society votes.
I met him once... (Score:5)
I thought he was going to jump out of his chair at me.
He got very upset and angrily announced that a scientist's only responsibility is to science. The possible uses of a discovery should not even be considered by the researchers -- that is someone elses business. And because of this, he did not feel even the slightest bit of remorse for his work on the bomb.
And then he upbraided _me_ (since I was on my way to grad school to become a scientist at the time) for thinking that a scientist _should_ worry about the moral implications of his/her work.
Needless to say, I didn't ask any more questions.
Re:Real scientists don't read Scientific American (Score:2)
And to imply that "real scientists" don't read it either is totally wrong.
The articles are at just the right level for a technically adept reader to see what's going on in science _outside_ of the readers area of expertise -- stick to peer-reviewed journals and pre-prints for the latest in your own field. And as far as accuracy is concerned, they are written by the preeminent researchers in their respective fields.
I, and many of my "real scientist" friends, believe that SciAm is one of the highest quality magazines out there for the intelligent reader.