Thesis ID: CBB001560638

“To Secure the Benefits of Science to the General Welfare”: The Scientists' Movement and the American Public during the Cold War, 1945--1960 (2007)

unapi

Barnhart, Megan Kathleen (Author)


University of California, Los Angeles
Wang, Jessica


Publication Date: 2007
Edition Details: Advisor: Wang, Jessica
Physical Details: 311 pp.
Language: English

During the Cold War, many scientists became advisors to the federal government, working with officials to develop policies that would serve America's Cold War agenda. Policymakers in Washington prized scientists as advisors because of their supposed objectivity. Many felt scientists should not step outside the boundaries of their technical expertise and attempt to offer input on how technology should be used. However, some scientists found the domestic and foreign policies of the U.S. government troubling, and they were uneasy about the role they, as the creators of the technology that fueled the Cold War, played in furthering those policies. After the end of World War II, many Manhattan Project scientists banded together with colleagues in other scientific disciplines to form the Federation of American Scientists (FAS). This "scientists' movement'' had two goals: securing passage of legislation that would ensure civilian control and promote international cooperation on atomic energy, and the education of the American public about the dangers of the nuclear age. In their efforts to make the public aware of the need to control atomic power, scientists of the FAS found themselves in an uncomfortable position. Although they insisted their mission was to simply provide the "facts" to a public in need of guidance, they realized that the process of educating the public might necessitate sacrificing their public image of objectivity and advocating a particular position on the issue of atomic energy control. This dissertation explores the dilemma over objectivity that the FAS encountered during the early years of the Cold War. I argue that although this problem nearly derailed the scientists' movement, the scientists of the FAS eventually contested the notion that scientists could not take a political position, and in so doing staked a claim as representatives for a science that would serve the public interest. They advocated for transparency in the creation of public policy, worked to limit military control over science, and argued for the preservation of the health and safety of all human beings. The FAS set a precedent for future scientific groups that would later take up the cause of promoting public- interest science.

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Description “Explores the dilemma over objectivity that the Federation of Atomic Scientists encountered during the early years of the Cold War [in which they eventually] contested the notion that scientists could not take a political position, and ... staked a claim as representatives for a science that would serve the public interest.” (from the abstract) Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 69/01 (2008). Pub. no. AAT 3295739.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001560638/

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Authors & Contributors
Higuchi, Toshihiro
Sáez de Adana, Francisco
Maar, Henry Richard, III
Camprubi Bueno, Lino
Unger, Corinna R.
Thompson, Nicholas
Journals
Technology and Culture
Social Studies of Science
Representations
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of Contemporary History
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Publishers
Oxford University Press
University of Texas at Austin
Yale University Press
University of Wisconsin Press
Stanford University Press
Los Libros de la Catarata
Concepts
Science and politics
Nuclear weapons; atomic weapons
Cold War
Political activists and activism
Science and war; science and the military
Public understanding of science
People
Sagan, Carl
Rabinowitch, Eugene
Pauling, Linus Carl
Kistiakowsky, George Bogdan
Huxley, Julian Sorell
Wiesner, Jerome B.
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
Great Britain
West Virginia (U.S.)
Spain
Russia
Institutions
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Partial Test Ban Treaty; Limited Test Ban Treaty (1963)
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
Federation of American Scientists
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (U.S.)
United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
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