Beyond uncertainty : Heisenberg, quantum physics, and the bomb

Bibliographic Information

Beyond uncertainty : Heisenberg, quantum physics, and the bomb

David C. Cassidy

Bellevue Literary Press, 2009

  • : hbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Contents of Works

  • The early years
  • The world at war
  • The gymnasium years
  • The battle of Munich
  • Finding his path
  • Sommerfeld's Institute
  • Confronting the quantum
  • Modeling atoms
  • Channeling rivers, questioning causality
  • Entering the quantum matrix
  • Awash in matrices, rescued by waves
  • Determining uncertainty
  • Reaching the top
  • New frontiers
  • Into the abyss
  • Social atoms
  • Of particles and politics
  • Heir apparent
  • The lonely years
  • A Faustian bargain
  • One who could not leave
  • Warfare and its uses
  • A Copenhagen visit
  • Ordering reality
  • Professor in Berlin
  • Return to the matrix
  • One last attempt
  • Explaining the project, farm hall
  • Explaining the project, the world
  • The later years

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In 1992, David C. Cassidy's groundbreaking biography of Werner Heisenberg, Uncertainty, was published to resounding acclaim from scholars and critics. Michael Frayn, in the Playbill of the Broadway production of Copenhagen, referred to it as one of his main sources and the standard work in English. Richard Rhodes (The Making of the Atom Bomb) called it the definitive biography of a great and tragic physicist, and the Los Angeles Times praised it as an important book. Cassidy has sifted the record and brilliantly detailed Heisenberg's actions. No book that has appeared since has rivaled Uncertainty, now out of print, for its depth and rich detail of the life, times, and science of this brilliant and controversial figure of twentieth-century physics. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, long-suppressed information has emerged on Heisenberg's role in the Nazi atomic bomb project. In Beyond Uncertainty, Cassidy interprets this and other previously unknown material within the context of his vast research and tackles the vexing questions of a scientist's personal responsibility and guilt when serving an abhorrent military regime. David C. Cassidy is the author of J. Robert Oppenheimer and the American Century, Einstein and Our World, and Uncertainty, Professor of natural sciences at Hofstra University, he has served as associate editor of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, He is the only author to have received both the Science Writing Award from the American Institute of Physics and the Pfizer Award from the History of Science Society for the same book (Uncertainty).

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