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freedom-vs-secrecy
Gaunt argues that abandoning openness in atomic knowledge led to strategic vulnerability and moral failure.
1 chapter across 1 book
The Disappearance (1951)Philip Wylie
PART II
In this chapter, a group of American experts and officials debate the dire strategic and moral dilemmas posed by the threat of Soviet hydrogen bombs potentially hidden in harbors. They discuss the impracticality of mine-sweeping or evacuation, the consequences of secrecy versus openness in atomic knowledge, and the broader implications of freedom, war, and societal collapse following a mysterious catastrophe. The dialogue reveals deep tensions between pragmatism, idealism, and despair as they confront a world on the brink of Armageddon.