Idaho (and now PA) Opinion Pieces, Letters of Public Interest and other aimful musings.
Saturday, January 27, 2007
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Dribbling basketballs through math Commentary by Jim Banholzer http://www.mtexpress.com/story_printer.php?ID=2005108680 ...
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January 13, 2006 Solid Oak View Memories By Jim Banholzer I attended Oak View Elementary only one year, for fourth grade, but I remembe...
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Enlightening Eastwood’s Pale Rider By Jim Banholzer With special lights from Brad Nottingham & Professor Tom Trusky...
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Pink Rabbits and Flying Dreams Last night, I had a fanciful dream that I was back at my old Virginia house. I haven’t lived ...
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JBanholzer Says: February 6th, 2009 at 9:03 am Update: Rep. Stephen Hartgen, R- Twin Falls, has modified his proposal by introducing a new...
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Good news right under our noses " I found some surprisingly good news the other day, by merely using the Times-News search engine. To...
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Linda Garver finally catches up with me. I remember February 29, 1972 , back when I was in sixth grade with Linda Garver and we...
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Toy Reason Word prompt from Angela Earle’s writing class / summer of 2006 Toy is the fruit of the first season of man – reason being the sec...
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Meanwhile, I have also been working on some submissions for a next newsletter, which I will include here shortly. Depending on when you pu...
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Darth Cheney On Halloween, when the Cheney’s dressed up one of their dogs in a Darth Vader costume, USA Today ran a story about it, entitle...
--Exhibit Contents-- Exhibit HOME Formative Years The Great Works - 1905 World Fame Public Concerns Quantum and Cosmos Nuclear Age Science and Philosophy "The World As I See It" - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - More About Einstein Site Contents
ReplyDelete"Concern for man himself must always constitute the chief objective of all technological effort -- concern for the big, unsolved problems of how to organize human work and the distribution of commodities in such a manner as to assure that the results of our scientific thinking may be a blessing to mankind, and not a curse."
Einstein's letter to FDR regarding the possibility of the creation of a nuclear bomb.
Scientists in the 1930s, using machines that could break apart the nuclear cores of atoms, confirmed Einstein's formula E=mc² . The release of energy in a nuclear transformation was so great that it could cause a detectable change in the mass of the nucleus. But the study of nuclei -- in those years the fastest growing area of physics -- had scant effect on Einstein. Nuclear physicists were gathering into ever-larger teams of scientists and technicians, heavily funded by governments and foundations, engaged in experiments using massive devices. Such work was alien to Einstein's habit of abstract thought, done alone or with a mathematical assistant. In return, experimental nuclear physicists in the 1930s had little need for Einstein's theories.
In August 1939 nuclear physicists came to Einstein, not for scientific but for political help. The fission of the uranium nucleus had recently been discovered. A long-time friend, Leo Szilard, and other physicists realized that uranium might be used for enormously devastating bombs. They had reason to fear that Nazi Germany might construct such weapons. Einstein, reacting to the danger from Hitler's aggression, had already abandoned his strict pacifism. He now signed a letter that was delivered to the American president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, warning him to take action. This letter, and a second Einstein-Szilard letter of March 1940, joined efforts by other scientists to prod the United States government into preparing for nuclear warfare. Einstein played no other role in the nuclear bomb project. As a German who had supported left-wing causes, he was denied security clearance for such sensitive work. But during the war he did perform useful service as a consultant for the United States Navy's Bureau of Ordnance.
A postwar reconstruction of the signing of the letter.
The Quantum and the Cosmos: At Home The Nuclear Age II
Exhibit Info | Exhibit Home
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