science-and-military-ethics
The concern among scientists about the moral implications of their discoveries being used for warfare, as reflected in warnings against allowing powerful entities to misuse scientific knowledge.
1 chapter across 1 book
Brighter than a Thousand Suns - A Personal History of the Atomic Scientists (1956)Robert Jungk
This chapter details the post-World War I period (1918-1923) in atomic physics, focusing on Ernest Rutherford's groundbreaking experiments that achieved artificial disintegration of the atom, marking the first successful transmutation of matter. It highlights the tension between scientific discovery and its potential military misuse, the international collaboration and communication among physicists despite wartime hostilities, and the profound paradigm shifts in physics brought about by Planck, Einstein, Bohr, and Rutherford that challenged classical conceptions of nature, matter, space, and time.