{"id":7907,"date":"2023-06-30T06:01:42","date_gmt":"2023-06-30T06:01:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fieldstonnews.com\/home\/?p=7907"},"modified":"2023-06-30T06:01:44","modified_gmt":"2023-06-30T06:01:44","slug":"oppenheimer-a-complex-legacy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fieldstonnews.com\/home\/2023\/06\/oppenheimer-a-complex-legacy\/","title":{"rendered":"Oppenheimer: A Complex Legacy"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>One of Ethical Culture Fieldston\u2019s most famous alumni is John Robert Oppenheimer \u201821, theoretical physicist who directed the science, and the machinery behind the science, of the Manhattan Project, the secret war-time project that manufactured the world\u2019s first atomic bombs. Oppenheimer started at Ethical&nbsp; in 1911 in the second grade. After skipping 8th grade and later becoming valedictorian, he began studying physics at Harvard. The Oppenheimer family was incredibly important to Fieldston.&nbsp; Both J. Robert Oppenheimer and his younger brother Frank studied here and their father was a deeply committed member of the Ethical Culture Society.&nbsp; J. Robert Oppenheimer is the subject of a new film, set to be released in July of 2022.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The film is directed by writer\/director Christopher Nolan, an acclaimed figure in the world of film (The Dark Knight, The Dark Knight Rises, Inception, Dunkirk.) The film, starring Cillian Murphy, Emily Blunt and Robert Downey Jr.,<em> <\/em>will follow the story of creating the atomic bomb and its use&nbsp; in World War II, with a focus on Oppenheimer and his personal story. To get ready for&nbsp; the film, I sat down with some Fieldston physics teachers and Toby Himmel, from the Alumni Relations office, to learn more about Oppenheimer and how Fieldston influenced his career.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Oppenheimer&nbsp; was America\u2019s best known physicist in the 1930s. Oppenheimer, as chief scientist and project head, coordinated efforts in Manhattan, Chicago, Tennessee and New Mexico and created an \u201copen atmosphere\u201d of creativity and collaboration amongst his researchers.&nbsp; Best known for his work as the \u201cmanager of scientists\u201d on the Manhattan Project, J. Robert Oppenheimer is often referred to as the \u201cfather of the atomic bomb.\u201d The project, based in Los Alamos, New Mexico, was groundbreaking for the time, and led to a number of advances in both science and, unfortunately, war.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After the use of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Oppenheimer grew increasingly critical of the use of atomic power for warfare.&nbsp; He ran afoul of Edward Teller, a rival&nbsp; physicist, and a believer in a large nuclear arsenal, and as Cold War politics intensified, both Oppenheimer and his brother, Frank, fell from prominence, and were blacklisted from any academic work or future government service. The two were both heavily involved in science and the political sphere, and this was a devastating blow for them. J. Robert Oppenheimer ceased his involvement in the scientific world, while his brother went on to found the Exploratorium in San Francisco, California. There\u2019s no question that the pair have had enormous influence on our country, and the world as a whole.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While at Fieldston, Oppenheimer explored a number of paths, discovering and exploring his love for physics in the final years of his time here. Upper School physics teacher Jonathan Lambert spoke about a trip Oppenheimer took to the Southwest in his final years at Ethical Culture. It was a kind of arduous physical and spiritual journey at the same time. During this trip, he visited a sleepy western hamlet called Los Alamos with his teacher, immediately becoming interested in the work being done at the location. He later went on to create the atomic bomb working at this same facility.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite attending The Ethical Culture School, Oppenheimer was never educated on the Fieldston campus (the first graduation was 1928). Considering when the Fieldston campus was built, Robert\u2019s younger brother, Frank Oppenheimer, would\u2019ve been in the first graduating class to set foot on the campus. Even so, many of us are familiar with the Oppenheimer laboratory at Fieldston, located in the 400s building, in which you can find scientific instruments dating back to the early 1900s.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Upper school physics teacher Benjamin Wearn spoke about the physics department during the time of the Oppenheimers, from which there are equipment catalogs in German and old physics equipment. \u201cWe have old physics equipment that goes back a hundred years, some of it is clearly older than the building of this campus, so I do like to think that Oppenheimer used some of this equipment\u2026 and I get the sense there was a good physics teacher here then.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the time, the field of physics was much different than it is today. \u201cIt was like going from nothing, from sort of like the classical electromechanics work of the 19th century to a nearly modern interpretation, a contemporary 21st century interpretation of physics in the span of like 20 years,\u201d says Lambert. Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project propelled the world of physics, specifically nuclear science, into the next century. While we don\u2019t know much about the physics department during his time, his later work has certainly impacted the modern study of physics, at Fieldston and beyond.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In terms of our school\u2019s impact on Oppenheimer, Toby Himmel expanded upon his connection with Herbert Smith, former Ethical Culture principal and a mentor for J. Robert Oppenheimer, noting his role in Oppenheimer\u2019s recuperation after health issues he experienced in 1921. Toby has also shown scholars report cards and other Oppenheimer artifacts and hosted biographers David Cassidy and Kai Bird; both used Fieldston archives, now available at The New York Historical Society, for their work.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lambert noted that Oppenheimer most likely crossed paths with Felix Adler, whose hands-on involvement at Fieldston\u2019s development would\u2019ve overlapped with both of the Oppenheimer brothers\u2019 time at our school. \u201cI definitely think Oppenheimer would\u2019ve had experience with Adler directly.\u201d Lambert spoke about how intertwined Oppenheimer\u2019s political work, which leaned towards progressive causes,&nbsp; was aligned with the mission of our school.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Expectations for the film at Fieldston are varied, with some hoping for discussions of his time post-Manhattan Project, and some wanting to hear about his time at our school. However, Oppenheimer and his legacy are difficult to address.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>&nbsp;Even though Oppenheimer made incredible contributions to the scientific world, it seems as though he didn\u2019t comprehend the weight of what he was doing. As Lambert said, \u201cHe was so focussed on the goal\u2026 he didn\u2019t sort of pause to think about the ramifications and the&nbsp; implications of the ethics around it.\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is a striking 1945 interview with Oppenheimer, after the testing of the atomic bomb in New Mexico, in which he quotes the Bhagavad Gita saying \u201cNow I have become Death, the destroyer of worlds.\u201d This is a horrifying vision.&nbsp; In it, some have said, Oppenheimer glimpses extinction.&nbsp; In that sentence is a sense of the enormity of the issues he faced and the conflict between pure science and the pursuit of science under wartime exigencies.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Oppenheimer\u2019s legacy has been clouded by debates on the atomic bomb, and while I can\u2019t speak to the ethics of his actions, I can say that, without Oppenheimer, it\u2019s unclear where nuclear weapons would be today. Bob Montera, in the history department says:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cHow does a person, trained as a kid in ethical debates and discussion, build, as an adult, a weapon of mass destruction? It is important to remember that Hitler\u2019s Germany was pursuing a superweapon, an atomic bomb policy under Werner Heisenberg. Einstein warned Roosevelt of this, which set the research in motion. &nbsp; It is an ethical dilemma and&nbsp; minefield and, very indirectly, tells us a good deal about Oppenheimer\u2019s mental landscape; any scientist\u2019s&nbsp; mental landscape under the exigencies of war. By the time the atomic bomb&nbsp; was tested, July 1945, Germany had been defeated.&nbsp; But then it was directed against Japan. That had a lot to do with the high casualties and suicidal resistance late in the Pacific War.&nbsp; There was no Japanese atomic bomb program. By August 1945 almost 90 percent of Japan\u2019s cities were in ruins. The air force had been wholly destroyed. So, why use it?&nbsp; And that&nbsp; had to do with politics and policy. And that was bigger than Oppenheimer.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While it\u2019s certain that ethical debates about nuclear weapons will continue for decades, one thing that I think many here at Fieldston can agree on is a shared excitement to see this biopic and how it tackles the issues associated with one of our most influential alumni.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>One of Ethical Culture Fieldston\u2019s most famous alumni is John Robert Oppenheimer \u201821, theoretical physicist who directed the science, and the machinery behind the science, of the Manhattan Project, the secret war-time project that manufactured the world\u2019s first atomic bombs. Oppenheimer started at Ethical&nbsp; in 1911 in the second grade. After skipping 8th grade and later becoming valedictorian, he began studying physics at Harvard. The Oppenheimer family was incredibly important to Fieldston.&nbsp; Both J. 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