Robert Oppenheimer — "The scientist is a man who knows how to make things, but he does not know how to…"
The scientist is a man who knows how to make things, but he does not know how to live.
The scientist is a man who knows how to make things, but he does not know how to live.
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"Sometimes the answer to fear does not lie in trying to explain away the causes, sometimes the answer lies in courage."
"We have to find a way to use this power for good, not for evil."
"There are no experts in this world, only people who know more than others on specific subjects."
"Science is not everything, but science is very beautiful."
"The atomic bomb is a demonstration of the power of science, but it is also a demonstration of the folly of man."
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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Technical mastery and the ability to build or create doesn't automatically grant wisdom about how to live ethically or meaningfully. A person can reach the highest levels of professional expertise while remaining blind to the human consequences of their work, or to what actually makes a life worth living. Intelligence and skill are powerful tools, but wisdom about living is a separate and harder thing to acquire.
Oppenheimer directed the Manhattan Project and built the first atomic bomb, watching its devastating use kill hundreds of thousands at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He famously quoted the Bhagavad Gita—'Now I am become Death'—and later spent years campaigning against hydrogen bomb development. His security clearance was revoked in 1954 amid McCarthyism. He embodied the tragic gap between scientific mastery and wisdom about what creation costs.
The mid-20th century witnessed unprecedented scientific acceleration—nuclear fission, radar, jet propulsion, early computing—while simultaneously producing Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and a Cold War arms race that threatened civilization's survival. Scientists moved from university laboratories to weapons programs almost overnight, with enormous destructive power and minimal ethical frameworks. Society was forced to confront whether human moral wisdom could possibly keep pace with rapidly expanding technical power.
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