The play OPERATION EPSILON, is about the six months that an elite group of German scientists, including Werner Heisenberg and Otto Hahn, were confined in an English country house after the German surrender which ended World War Two’s European chapter. These scientists had spent their professional lives in Nazi Germany working on atomic research, each with different takes on the so-called neutrality/purity of their work—though most often we hear them proclaim to simply be scientists and not the politicians who made operational decisions about their findings. Although the play (based upon transcripts taken from the bugged house) presents an extreme set of circumstances, after I saw it, I began thinking about the issues of morality that follow us all in our professional and daily lives.
Two characters who really caught my attention were Werner Heisenberg and Otto Hahn. When Hahn is informed privately by their guard that the United States had dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, he burst into heart-wrenching sobs, believing that, as the person who actually discovered the fission of uranium and thorium in medium heavy atomic nuclei, he was responsible for the hundreds of thousands of deaths. Later that night when all the scientists heard the news on the radio, their reaction was stunned disbelief, then an angry debate about how the Americans could have possibly done the science when they, the Germans, were supposedly the top dogs. Those who were overt Nazis quickly turned on Heisenberg since his work had commandeered most available research funding while his calculations suggested the creation of a bomb was impossible. Virtually nothing was said that night about the devastation wreaked by the atomic bomb.
Later in play, when news reached the house that Otto Hahn had won the 1944 Noble Prize for chemistry, a joyous party ensued among the scientists and there Hahn was, proud as a peacock, about the very discovery that had sent him into a paroxysm of tears about all those dead Japanese.
Morally speaking, is science a special category because its findings turned into reality can directly affect people? And, if so, are these ethical issues limited to wartime? Or do pharmaceutical researchers have the same burden when they see their employers short-cut their way to creating products suggested by their work? And what about all the research that might be considered “benign,” like infant studies. Should all scientists feel responsible or be held accountable for the effects of their studies despite not making the decisions about how their research is used?
From where I sit science is not a special category because I believe the same issues of neutrality or responsibility is an everyday question for damn near everyone.
For the most part we don’t ask our foot soldiers to shoulder the moral weight of killing. Further up the military food chain, it certainly comes into play. “Just following orders” didn’t fly at the Nuremburg Trials. Even Errol Morris’s documentary, The Fog Of War, basically a two hour interview with Robert McNamara, raises these concerns. At one point McNamara, who was part of the decision making process that unleashed the firebombing of Tokyo where around 100,000+ of men, women, and children were burned to death in about one day, remarks, {Curtis} LeMay said, ’If we’d lost the war, we’d all have been prosecuted as war criminals.’ And I think he’s right. He, and I’d say I, were behaving as war criminals. LeMay recognized that what he was doing would be thought immoral if his side had lost. But what makes it immoral if you lose and not immoral if you win?
Once you step away from the obvious situations where people and their professions have live or die impact upon others, what happens to the question of our responsibility to identify our own moral imperatives? If the idea that “everything is political” and has humanitarian consequences, is it an artist’s responsibility to manifest his or her political/humanitarian point of view in their work? Certainly Picasso’s Guernica represented his as do many paintings by different artists, books by writers, plays by playwrights, and music by musicians.
But what of the artist who clings to the belief that it’s necessary to stand outside the society, culture, politics to genuinely express his or her vision? Or the journalist who believes it’s unethical as a neutral reporter to pull a child out of a fire? Are they simply refusing to acknowledge that morality is always embodied in their work, whether meant to be or not?
I imagine the issue of personal responsibility has raged throughout history. Certainly during wartimes, but not only. How many people felt an individual responsibility to publically condemn slavery? An individual responsibility to openly reject the oppression of children before child labor laws were passed?
Truth is, the list of issues is endless with no clear cut answers about the integration of morality into one’s daily life. We basically leave it up to the individual to decide their own responsibility to others on the planet. But I wonder if that’s really good enough to create a world without starvation, disease, and brutal wars.
And it cuts closer to home than that—albeit with different consequences. What about buying SodaStream from an Israeli company parked on Palestinian property? Or, the choice to abandon urban public schools by the middle and upper middle class? Or, our willingness to allow decent people to lose their houses because of institutional greed and avarice?
No one told us that being a responsible citizen would be easy. But difficulty can’t be used as an excuse. Had McNamara and his cohorts refused to fry Tokyo’s population, or refused to napalm the North Vietnamese, or if we refuse to allow the notion of amorality, despite morality’s incredible contradictions, might not the world be a better place?
Or might it be just as bad or worse? I have had the same thoughts myself.
Don–I don’t know. Why there are more questions than answers.
Snap response…You’re asking questions that are well above my pay grade. This planet has always been at war somewhere. In many ways, it is our natural state.
While I wish I could change this paradigm, and actively support efforts to effect that change, I recognize the luxury I have to hold such views. I am able distance myself from the moral implications by my personal choices and actions.
Since the potential outcomes that my world view would precipitate have rarely been tested in real world settings, it’s likely we’ll never know if peace is a sustainable state.
As a roughly middle class parent who abandoned our public high school when faced with that reality, I sleep at night knowing that I did everything I could to correct the problem before opting out.
Or- as I have consistently held:
You say you’re unhappy?
You blame it on ME?
I can’t make you happy.
You don’t listen to me!
Bill–“, it’s likely we’ll never know if peace is a sustainable state. ”
Too damn true and it sucks.
Then there is no alternative than to detach yourself from things beyond your ability to influence.
It could be argued that the non-voting public has achieved a far healthier state of existence than those who cling to the belief that their efforts will attain their goals. Finding peace with that may be as close as one can get.
bill-Sad to say you’re probably correct. Bummer.
Another play has a long discussion between hisenberg and Bohr. Climax is hisenberg saying that Bohr won because his team built bomb, and Bohr notes that killing so many is not something he should be proud of
Einstein authored famous letter to FDR pleading with him to build bomb
Fact is that Einstein signed and sent letter, but it was written by Leo Szilard. LS realized bomb was terrible idea and would not send it
Science is no more neutral than any other form of knowledge or belief
Ron–I agree.
Three things…
Humans are inventive, adaptable, creative, altruistic, and violent. Any new thing that has ever been invented has either been weaponized or at least tried to be adapted to weapons. This sword cuts both ways. New weapons are turned into great benefits for mankind too. The bronze in Roman swords was eventually turned into improved plowshares to provide greater food supplies for humanity. The Manhattan Project is still giving millions around the world clean, peaceful nuclear power and cancer-fighting nuclear medicines. The Defense Department’s experiments on linking computers in the event of nuclear war gave us the Internet. The list is practically endless. This further complicates the moral issue. Can a thing in and of itself even BE moral or immoral?
Ever hear of Operation Coronet? How about Operation Olympus? Those were to be the two-pronged pincer attacks on mainland Japan to bring them to surrender (read “complete devastation”) and stop WW II. The Allies expected at least one million casualties on their side alone. Check out YouTube for testimonies from elderly Japanese who, as school children, were being trained to meet U.S. Marines on the beach with sharpened bamboo spears, or were being trained at nine and ten years old to strap bombs to themselves and run towards American tanks. Little Boy and Fat Man saved millions upon millions of Japanese lives by forcing their Emperor to surrender. Yes, the two nukes killed hundreds of thousands. But they saved millions. The moral question here, in this one instance, is somewhat clearer. Only historical revisionists still wrongly debate the use of atomic weapons to end WW II. It must also be remembered that since those two bombings–which were so shocking and so horrible–no nuclear weapons have been used in war since. On several occasions their mere existence has stopped WW III before it ever started. Another World War is simply too horrible for even the “winner” to contemplate.
The film documentary “Copenhagen Fall Out” deals with the various moral quandaries of Hans Bethe (Allied side) and Werner Heisenberg (German side). The two men were as close a brothers, very dear friends, before Hitler came to total power. They not only worked out problems with nuclear physics together, they hiked together, visited each other frequently, wrote each other endlessly, were as dear to each other as two men can get. The war changed all that. It’s a fascinating look at the morality of two men and how each of them grappled with the same problem. Hans Bethe had the ability to see *through* any moral questions and realized what Nazi V-2 rockets with nuclear warheads would mean to all humanity.
Very, very highly recommended.
topdocumentaryfilms.com/copenhagan-fall-out/
Kent
Kent–Thanks for the comments and information. The play Ron mentioned in his comment is called Copenhagen and well worth seeing. I’ve seen two different productions and both were super interesting.
Apologies for the glaring error. Ron was correct. It was Neils Bohr who carried that moral question to his grave, not Hans Bethe. Got my Manhattans misconstrued.
Kent
Kent–no problem. I should have caught it too since I saw Copenhagen twice.