“I am become death, the shatterer of worlds.” J. Robert Oppenheimer
thought as he witnessed the first atomic bomb, his creation, explode at the
Trinity test site. An atomic age was dawning and Oppenheimer was leading the
way. The potential of science and reason to offer a solution to violence, a
core idea of the Enlightenment, would forever be upset by the onset of the
nuclear age. The twentieth century marked a new age in science during which
it no longer sought to end violence but rather would come to be used by the
state to exponentially increase destruction. This began in the First World
War—a chemist’s war—and the transformation culminated in
the Second World War with the race to the atom bomb—largely a project
of physicists but also the collective work of science and technology.
This book is a sociological biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer that grew out
of Charles Thorpe’s dissertation. Thorpe earned his Ph.D. from the Department
of Sociology and interdisciplinary Science Studies at the University of California,
San Diego and is currently a lecturer in science and technology studies at
University College London. Thorpe has studied twentieth-century intellectuals
and the changing relationship between science and the state. He is particularly
interested in the changing role of scientists as their relation between science,
politics and culture became increasingly fluid in the twentieth century. Oppenheimer
is a classic example, as he became the nodal point for the intersections of
the power of science, state and military.
This study
of Oppenheimer weaves together history and biography from the perspective of
a sociologist. Thorpe’s main aim is to situate Oppenheimer’s life
in a broader social context. The author considers not only the way in which
Oppenheimer fashioned his own identity, but also how the social processes surrounding
him shaped his character. Max Weber’s ideas on vocation, charisma, responsibility,
and cultivation create a natural, if unintended, framework for the examination
of Oppenheimer. Thorpe uses the writings of Oppenheimer as well as the impressions,
reactions, and interpretations of those who surrounded the scientist throughout
his life to place Oppenheimer within a larger social framework and demonstrate
that Oppenheimer’s persona, leadership, and charisma as a public figure
were collectively shaped. These sources shed light on how Oppenheimer’s
character shaped those around him and was in turn shaped by them. The author
sees identity as not only being fashioned by the individual but also by society.
Thorpe
begins his study of Oppenheimer by examining his family background—German
Jewish bourgeoisie in New York City—and education. Oppenheimer, however,
strained to establish an identity that was secular and found an avenue through
the Ethical Culture School, where there was a philosophy of self-cultivation
through learning. Oppenheimer’s path to the theoretical physics
that would make him famous was not preordained. He struggled through Harvard
and Cambridge, where his studies were largely misdirected and his identity
uncertain. While at Cambridge, Oppenheimer escaped the laboratory of experimental
physics and discovered the world of theoretical physics. Oppenheimer continued
his studies in Europe before taking a position at UC Berkeley and helped bring
the advances of physics in European institutions to America. At Berkeley
he built a physics program of his own.
Thorpe portrays Oppenheimer as a bridge throughout the book. He bridged the
ocean between European and American learning as well as the gap between experimental
and theoretical physics. His education, both in the humanities and the sciences,
also bridged the growing divide between narrow specialization in the sciences
and the cultivated scholar. Oppenheimer went on to serve as a bridge between
science and the military in the Manhattan Project.
The hothouse atmosphere of the Los Alamos laboratory helped to forge Oppenheimer
into the leader that he ultimately became. An unlikely candidate to lead the
scientists working on the atomic bomb project, Oppenheimer quickly rose to
the challenge. He negotiated between the military personnel and the civilian
scientists—both of whom came from different cultural backgrounds and
worked in different ways. Lesley Groves, the senior military commander in charge
of the Manhattan Project, and Oppenheimer served complementary roles in their
leadership positions. Groves represented the interests of the military and
state. He forced the compartmentalization of the project for security reasons
and pushed for regulated, disciplined work on the project so that it could
meet timetable standards along the way to completion. Oppenheimer came to represent
the needs and interests of the scientists, who wanted a more open exchange
of information and were accustomed to the less regulated university setting.
While Oppenheimer was not necessarily at odds with Groves, he did come to earn
the faith and respect of the scientists who he represented and he learned to
negotiate the pathways between science and the military. Oppenheimer’s
leadership was a collective accomplishment of the civilian and military personnel
of the Los Alamos Laboratory.
While the success of the atomic bomb may have been the pivotal moment in Oppenheimer’s
life, Thorpe’s book revolves around the creation of Oppenheimer as a
leader. Molded at Los Alamos, Oppenheimer took a leading role after the war
in negotiating between policy and science in the nuclear age as well as conveying
the cultural and political meanings of the bomb to the larger public. From
the end of World War II until the security hearings in 1954, Oppenheimer personified
the new power of scientists. Oppenheimer, unlike any other individual scientist
was able to understand, articulate, and embrace the scientific community’s
fall from grace. He understood that with the onset of the atomic age, new responsibilities
would fall on the scientist. Only Oppenheimer could add the necessary humanist
and moral dimension to the new role of scientists in the state. The 1954 security
hearings relegated Oppenheimer to a position outside the state and while he
lost his power, he fashioned himself as a martyr of the cultivated scientist
that would continue to influence the nation and the scientific community.
This book is not a typical biography. It is not a mere recounting of the deeds
and misdeeds of Oppenheimer, but rather the shaping and transformation of his
identity and the role of the individual and community in the creation of character.
This work, like other recent biographies of Oppenheimer, fits the scientist
within the broader changing political and social context of the times. Readers
with an interest in sociology, identity formation, and history of science and
the atomic age in America will find this an intriguing read. It is just as
much about the culture of science in World War II and early Cold War America
as it is about the life of J. Robert Oppenheimer.