Chapter ID: CBB970702810

The Scientist as Expert: Fritz Haber and German Chemical Warfare During the First World War and Beyond (2017)

unapi

Szöllösi-Janze, Margit (Author)


Springer International
Pages: 11-23
Publication date: 2017
Language: English


In the course of the First World War, scientists who would in peacetime generate new knowledge assumed the role of experts, i.e., professionals who made extant knowledge accessible to non-scientist clients. The deepest conviction of Fritz Haber, the 1918 Chemistry Nobel laureate, was that problems faced by mankind could be solved by means of science and technology. Herein, Haber is interpreted as a personification of an early German expert culture. Acting as both mediator and organizer, Haber coaxed politicians, generals, industrial leaders, and scientists to join forces in developing new processes for the mass-production of war-relevant chemicals and in establishing large-scale industries for their manufacture. Among the chemicals produced were poison gases—the first weapons of mass extermination. Haber’s leadership resulted in a conglomerate of enterprises similar to what we now call “big science”. In close contact with “big industry”, traditional science was transformed into a new type of applied research. With borderlines between the military and civilian use blurred, Fritz Haber’s activities also represent an early example of what we now call “dual use”. He initiated modern pest control by toxic substances, whereby he made use of a military product for civilian purposes, but went also the other way around: During the Weimar era, he used pest control as a disguise for illegal military research. Having emerged under the stress of war, scientific expertise would remain ambivalent—a permanent legacy of the First World War.

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Book Bretislav Friedrich; Dieter Hoffmann; Jürgen Renn; Florian Schmaltz; Martin Wolf (2017) One Hundred Years of Chemical Warfare: Research, Deployment, Consequences. unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Friedrich, Bretislav
Johnson, Jeffrey Allan
Peter B. Thompson
Eckart, Wolfgang U.
Freemantle, Michael
Hoffmann, Dieter
Journals
Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry
Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
History and Technology
Indian Journal of History of Science
Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy
Publishers
Springer International
Cambridge University Press
de Gruyter
Franco Angeli
History Press
Concepts
World War I
Chemical warfare
Science and war; science and the military
Chemistry
World War II
Technology and war; technology and the military
People
Haber, Fritz
Immerwahr, Clara
Planck, Max
Nicolai, Georg Friedrich
Time Periods
20th century, early
20th century
19th century
21st century
Places
Germany
Great Britain
Berlin (Germany)
Europe
France
United States
Institutions
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für physikalische Chemie und Electrochemie
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Instituten
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