Science and GovernmentHarvard University Press, 1961 - 88 pages Examines the problem of how governments can most effectively make use of scientists, and tells the story of the wartime enmity between two powerful British scientists. |
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Page 3
... believe that any person , moderately detached and moderately sentient , can read the sombre pages of The Strategic Air Offensive without a feeling of something like vertigo - that this is the way we have to make cardinal choices . The ...
... believe that any person , moderately detached and moderately sentient , can read the sombre pages of The Strategic Air Offensive without a feeling of something like vertigo - that this is the way we have to make cardinal choices . The ...
Page 30
... believe the war could have been won half a year or even a year earlier . The only major campaign in modern history in which the traditional military doctrine of waging war against the enemy's armed forces was aban- doned for a planned ...
... believe the war could have been won half a year or even a year earlier . The only major campaign in modern history in which the traditional military doctrine of waging war against the enemy's armed forces was aban- doned for a planned ...
Page 36
... believe that it exists . That is the danger of having one scientist in a position of power among nonscientists . Whatever we do , it must not happen again . NOTES 1. Charles Webster and Noble Frankland , The Strategic Air Offensive ...
... believe that it exists . That is the danger of having one scientist in a position of power among nonscientists . Whatever we do , it must not happen again . NOTES 1. Charles Webster and Noble Frankland , The Strategic Air Offensive ...
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A. V. Hill achieved aerial mines Air Ministry Air Staff aircraft Alpha-plus of deep ancient Sigma applied to practical behaviour Birmingham Bomber Command bombing of Germany bombing offensive British built-up areas cavity magnetron centimetric Cherwell's closed politics Coastal Command controversy country's military strength danger decisions deep design documents Fighter Command friends German towns Godkin Lectures godlike H. M. Stationery Office heavy bombers historians introduction of Window judgment as applied klystron laboratory Lambda-Mu Linde Lindemann Lindemann's scientific judgment Lord Birkenhead mann ment military operations night fighters Noble Frankland Nuclear testing Odin official history ordinary human judgment original lectures parachutes physicists policy of bombing Prime Minister priority for radar problem pure scientist realised Science and Government seemed sense Sir Charles Webster Sir Henry Tizard son of destiny story Strategic Air Offensive strategic bombing Theta tion Tizard Committee Vannevar Bush Watson Watt Webster and Frankland Wimperis wrong