Enrico Fermi — "I consider myself a lucky man who did not have to choose between going to war an…"
I consider myself a lucky man who did not have to choose between going to war and doing something else. I just did what I was doing.
I consider myself a lucky man who did not have to choose between going to war and doing something else. I just did what I was doing.
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"One might be led to question whether the scientists acted wisely in presenting the statesmen of the world with this appalling problem. Actually there was no choice. Once basic knowledge is acquired, a…"
"We are like children playing on the seashore, and we have found a few smooth pebbles and pretty shells, while the great ocean of truth lies undiscovered before us."
"I have been very lucky in my life. I have always been able to do what I wanted to do, and I have always been able to do it with people I liked."
"I am grateful for the opportunity to have contributed to the advancement of science, and to have witnessed the birth of the atomic age."
"The true joy of discovery is not in finding something new, but in understanding something old."
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Fermi reflects that he was fortunate his scientific work and wartime demands aligned perfectly. Many men faced an agonizing choice between enlisting to fight and staying home for other pursuits. Fermi never faced that dilemma — his physics research, building nuclear reactors and contributing to weapons development, was itself the war effort. He simply continued doing what he already loved, spared the moral weight of choosing between duty and vocation.
Fermi fled fascist Italy in 1938, using his Nobel Prize ceremony as cover for emigration. In America, he led the team achieving the first sustained nuclear chain reaction beneath Chicago's Stagg Field in December 1942, then worked at Los Alamos on the bomb itself. His unique expertise made him irreplaceable to the Allied war effort — a rare alignment of personal calling and national need that few scientists of his era experienced so cleanly.
During World War II, millions wrestled with the tension between military service and civilian contributions. The Manhattan Project drew physicists worldwide into a secret weapons program, blurring the line between science and warfare. European intellectuals who fled fascism — Einstein, Szilard, Teller, Fermi — found their expertise suddenly strategic. The atomic bomb marked the first time pure physics became decisive military technology, permanently transforming scientists from observers into active participants in global conflict.
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