Robert Oppenheimer — "The atomic bomb is a culmination of a hundred years of physics."
The atomic bomb is a culmination of a hundred years of physics.
The atomic bomb is a culmination of a hundred years of physics.
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"It is perfectly obvious that the whole world is going to hell. The only possible chance that it might not is that we do not attempt to prevent it from doing so."
"The atomic bomb is too terrible to be used as a weapon of war."
"We have to ask, what is this thing for? What is it for, other than to kill people?"
"The atomic bomb is a terrible thing, but it is also a beautiful thing."
"The atomic bomb is a weapon for aggressors, and the atomic bomb is a weapon of terror. It is not a defensive weapon. It is not a weapon of precision. It is a weapon for killing people. And its whole h…"
American theoretical physicist who directed the Manhattan Project's Los Alamos Laboratory and oversaw the atomic bombs; lost his security clearance in 1954. Closely associated with Niels Bohr (Manhattan Project consultant and atomic-policy advisor) and Hans Bethe (Los Alamos theoretical-division chief). For an intellectual contrast, see Edward Teller, Hungarian-American physicist and 'father of the H-bomb' — Teller pushed the H-bomb against Oppenheimer's objections and testified against him at his 1954 security hearing — the precise moment that ended Oppenheimer's career. The canonical 'physicist-of-conscience vs physicist-of-state' pairing in nuclear-age ethics; Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer (2023) dramatized this rivalry for a mass audience.
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The atomic bomb did not spring from a single discovery or inventor's flash of genius. It represents the accumulated knowledge of physics from the 1800s onward — from electromagnetism and thermodynamics through radioactivity, quantum mechanics, and Einstein's mass-energy equivalence. Each generation of scientists built on the last. The bomb was the endpoint of that chain, a technology made possible only because of a century of foundational scientific work preceding it.
Oppenheimer led the Manhattan Project, coordinating the world's top physicists at Los Alamos from 1942 to 1945. A theoretical physicist himself, he was deeply schooled in quantum mechanics and understood that the bomb drew on Rutherford's atomic model, Bohr's quantum theory, Einstein's E=mc2, and Fermi's chain reaction. He saw himself not as a lone inventor but as inheritor and executor of this century-long scientific lineage, a weight that troubled his conscience profoundly afterward.
In the 1940s, World War II created urgent pressure to weaponize physics. But the underlying science had been building since Maxwell's electromagnetism, Curie's radioactivity, and quantum mechanics breakthroughs of the 1920s, culminating in Hahn and Strassmann's nuclear fission discovery in 1938. The Manhattan Project harnessed that entire century of work. After Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, scientists worldwide grappled with moral responsibility for knowledge that could now annihilate entire cities in seconds.
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