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Marxist Encounters with Science

Aravindan NeelakandanJun 17, 2012, 03:30 PM | Updated Apr 29, 2016, 02:21 PM IST
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Marxism has always been marketed by Marxists as a scientific method of understanding society. According to Marxist indoctrination, just as Darwin discovered the mechanism of organic evolution, so did Marx discover the scientific mechanism of societal evolution.  However, a closer look at the way Marxist dogma and Marxist states approach science reveals that Marxism encounters science in the same way a closed Abrahamic theology encounters science.

The problem of Marxist encounters with science, like other problematic aspects of Marxism, starts with its founding fathers Marx and Engels. It was a great unifying vision that Karl Marx had unveiled as early as 1844, and it was:

Natural sciences will in time incorporate into itself the science of man, just as the science of man will incorporate into itself natural science, there will be one science.[1]

Thus, the nascent vision that Marx had for his theory as an all encompassing cosmological vision was as religious a vision as that of any zealot’s incorporation of physical sciences with ‘the science of man,’ which, of course, would be Marxism.

Karl Marx published the first volume of his magnum opus, ‘Das Kapital,’ in 1867 eight years after Charles Darwin published his Origin of Species (1859). Marx was initially enthralled by Darwin. In 1861 Marx wrote:

Darwin’s work is most important and suits my purpose in that it provides a basis in natural science for the historical class struggle. One does, of course, have to put up with the clumsy English style of argument. Despite all shortcomings, it is here that, for the first time, ‘teleology’ in natural science is not only dealt a mortal blow but its rational meaning is empirically explained.[2]

However, Marx gradually became disillusioned with Darwin. By June 1862 he wrote to Engels:

I’m amused that Darwin, at whom I’ve been taking another look, should say that he also applies the ‘Malthusian’ theory to plants and animals, as though in Mr Malthus’s case the whole thing didn’t lie in its not being applied to plants and animals, but only — with its geometric progression — to humans as against plants and animals. It is remarkable how Darwin rediscovers, among the beasts and plants, the society of England with its division of labour, competition, opening up of new markets, ‘inventions’ and Malthusian ‘struggle for existence’. It is Hobbes’ bellum omnium contra omnes and is reminiscent of Hegel’s Phenomenology, in which civil society figures as an ‘intellectual animal kingdom’, whereas, in Darwin, the animal kingdom figures as civil society.[3]

By 1866, Marx had come to the conclusion that Darwin had been superseded by Pierre Trémaux, a French orientalist and architect with a lot ethnographic studies to his credit. Marx now wrote:

A very important work which I shall send on to you (but on condition that you send it back, as it is not my property) as soon as I have made the necessary notes, is: ‘P. Trémaux, Origine et Transformations de l’Homme et des autres Êtres, Paris 1865. In spite of all the shortcomings that I have noted, it represents a very significant advance over Darwin. …In its historical and political applications far more significant and pregnant than Darwin. For certain questions, such as nationality, etc., only here has a basis in nature been found. E.g., he corrects the Pole Duchinski, whose version of the geological differences between Russia and the Western Slav lands he does incidentally confirm, by saying not that the Russians are Tartars rather than Slavs, etc., as the latter believes, but that on the surface-formation predominant in Russia the Slav has been Tartarised and Mongolised; likewise (he spent a long time in Africa) he shows that the common negro type is only a degeneration of a far higher one.[4]

What we see here in the initial rumblings of Marx against Darwin is not the result of a personal shortcoming of understanding exhibited by Marx – it shall become an abiding basic nature of Marxism. Like any closed theological system, Marxism wants science to be a hand maiden of theory – ‘the Theory’. It has specific preferences towards and bias against different hypotheses, not based on observed facts but based on the proximity of a hypothesis to ‘Theory’. A scientific theory aligned with the Marxist worldview should be promoted and that which is perceived as going against the Marxist creed should be opposed, and where Marxists have state power should be suppressed. This is what happened to Science in one of the darkest histories of persecution against science – not in the medieval dark ages, but in the twentieth century and with much more efficiency than any of the Church-run inquisitions.

Owing to the over-arching nature of the ‘Theory’ which sought to incorporate physical science with Marxism, Marxist theoreticians, starting from Engels, have had an abiding interest in the advancements of physical sciences. This, in itself, is neither good nor bad. But the problem is that what Marxists have is a closed system of dialectical materialism and they want the nature to fall in line with their ‘Theory’.

By 1905, Marxism had become a fashionable ‘ism’ among an influential section of Western socialists and some Russian political exiles, and Marx and Engels were already safely dead (and therefore immortal). It was against this backdrop that a paradigm shift had been brewing in physics for more than a decade occurred. In the words of Helge Kragh, historian of science:

The new physics that arose in the early years of the twentieth century was not a revolt against a petrified Newtonian worldview, something analogous to the revolt of Galileo against Aristotelianism. By 1905, the mechanical worldview had been under attack for more than a decade, and for this reason alone, there never was much of a clash between Einstein and Newton.[5]

One of those Russian political exiles was Vladimir Ilyich Lenin. He was viewing with increased contempt the way in which physics was moving away from what he perceived as the theoretical framework of dialectical materialism. By 1908 he brought out a book titled “Materialism and Empirio-criticism”. In this book Lenin gives his verdicts on those scientists and philosophers of science like Bogdanov, Wilhelm Ostwald, Poincaré, Le Rey and Berman. It would be a good exercise to see the dogmatic judgments Lenin makes on some of the scientists and philosophers of science of that period and their relevance to the history and philosophy of science subsequently.

Pierre Duhem was a physicist and a philosopher of science. In his book “The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory”, he considered the laws of physics as “neither true nor false but approximate” because they are “symbolic” picturing the reality “in a more or less precise, a more or less detailed manner.”[6] To Lenin this statement “contains the beginning of the falsity. However, the later developments in physics would reveal that Duhem was actually probing into the heart of a problem that physicists would debate passionately in the coming decades. For example, Louis de Broglie, one of the founding fathers of the new Physics and famous for his equation of particle-wavelength, evaluated the work of Duhem as, “a beautiful and great work where physicists of today can still find numerous topics worthy of reflection and study.”[7]

The focus of Lenin’s contemptuous attack was the work of physicist-philosopher, Ernst Mach. Mach called his philosophical method universal phenomenology. He considered the laws of physics as purely descriptive. Between two hypotheses that explain the same facts, the one that is economical should be chosen. Mach considered the laws of nature not as objective forces but summaries of human experience expressed economically. This economical principle, in turn, is based on a biological goal of working with minimum loss of energy. In other words, data derived from human sensory experiences are organized into hypotheses and those which are economical in terms of physical energy expenditure get selected. Naturally Mach’s philosophy of science had attracted many young Marxists then. But there was an irreconcilable point of difference. Suzanne Gieser explains:

Historical materialism was, however, so firmly based on nineteenth century ‘concretism’ that in the end it could not accept Mach’s emphasis on human experience as the foundation of science. In consequence, Lenin accused Mach of ‘idealistic solipsism’ because Mach made sensory impressions and not objective matter the basis of fact.[8]

Lenin was so bitter about Mach that he employs a vivid, emotional religious imagery against the scientist:

But this is all sheer obscurantism, out-and-out reaction. To regard atoms, molecules, electrons, etc., as an approximately true reflection in our mind of the objectively real movement of matter is equivalent to believing in an elephant upon which the world rests! … The philosophy of the scientist Mach is to science what the kiss of the Christian Judas was to Christ. Mach likewise betrays science into the hands of fideism by virtually deserting to the camp of philosophical idealism. Mach’s renunciation of natural-scientific materialism is a reactionary phenomenon in every respect.[9]

The subtle and almost subliminal juxtaposition of an oriental stereotype of a primitive worldview against a romantic theological imagery of Christendom can also be noticed here. However, the progress of science shows how exactly those aspects of Mach’s philosophy of science that came under the most bitter criticism from Lenin helped in the unfolding of one of the greatest achievements of modern physics.

A.V. Vasil’ev was a mathematician at Kazan University. His book series, ‘New Ideas in Mathematics,” when translated from Russian into English carried an introduction by Bertrand Russell. Alexander Vucinich, an eminent historian of Russian science, explains how Vasil’ev discovered the Machian influence on the development of Einstein’s theory of relativity:

Scrupulously and not without enthusiasm, Vasil’ev looked closer into Einstein’s indebtedness to Mach. From Mach, Einstein had received a solid grounding in epistemological arguments in favor of a fusion of physics and geometry as a unitary system of scientific operation, and, in general, of the “anthropomorphic” -or subjective- nature of the reality physicists considered their main target of inquiry. Vasil’ev was particularly impressed with Mach’s denial of any other reality apart from our sensations, an idea elaborated by a long line of philosophers. That idea, in his view, made a marked impression on Einstein who linked it with his construction of a relativistic approach to physical reality.[10]

Perhaps physicists and historians of science world over consider the transition period of Newtonian physics to new physics a period of great renaissance but for Lenin, this period was one of “a temporary deflection, a transitory period of sickness in the history of science, an ailment of growth.”[11] More importantly, Lenin gave specific instructions as to the direction in which science should be made to progress:

…One school of natural scientists in one branch of natural science has slid into a reactionary philosophy, being unable to rise directly and at once from metaphysical materialism to dialectical materialism. This step is being made, and will be made, by modern physics; but it is making for the only true method and the only true philosophy of natural science not directly, but by zigzags, not consciously but instinctively, not clearly perceiving its ‘final goal’, but drawing closer to it gropingly, hesitatingly, and sometimes even with its back turned to it.[12]

Once science is turned into the handmaiden of Theory, who shall make the scientists come to the ‘only true philosophy of nature’ except the theoretician? And how can a theoretician of the Theory wield that power if the state is not Marxist?

What is without state power a mere fulmination against the progress of science shall become a powerful inquisition-like drive when Marxism captures state power. And here are the seeds laid down by none other than Lenin.

If Marx envisioned Marxism as a holistic social science integrated with physical sciences, by 1913 Lenin presented Marxism in rapturous, religious glory rich in Euro-centrism:

The Marxist doctrine is omnipotent because it is true. It is comprehensive and harmonious, and provides men with an integral world outlook irreconcilable with any form of superstition, reaction or defence of bourgeois oppression. It is the legitimate successor to the best that man produced in the nineteenth century, as represented by German philosophy, English political economy and French socialism.[13]

Marxism thus differs from other philosophical systems in not just being rooted in materialism, but in considering itself true and omnipotent and rejecting anything its adherents perceive as contrary to it, as reactionary, superstitious, or a defence of bourgeois oppression. It is in this aspect that Marxism is simultaneously dangerously similar to and many times more efficient than medieval Christendom.

When Leninists captured power in Russia and established the Bolshevik state, scientific establishment came under the control of Marxist theoreticians. Historian of science Alexander Vucinich explains the initial problem Soviets had with Einstein:

Marxist philosophers were the most active – and the most inconsistent- interpreters of Einstein’s theory. Much of their uncertainty stemmed from Lenin’s warning that the modern revolution in physics was not only a great leap in man’s incessant effort to unlock the mysteries of nature, but also an enticing invitation to physical idealism. As defined by Lenin, physical idealism included all philosophical orientations in modern physics that refused to view matter as the primary substratum of physical reality, emphasized the subjective origins of scientific knowledge, and challenged the effectiveness of causality as the basic explanatory principle in science….[14]

A few scientists, professing outwardly to be Marxists, did try to salvage Einstein out of being branded as an idealist heretic in the new Marxist theocracy. But shrill voices had the official blessings of Marxist high priests. ‘Materialism and empirio-criticism’ penned by Lenin in 1908 had become, in the 1920s to Marxist academic censorship of USSR, what the Malleus Maleficarum was to the medieval Church.

Two Marxist theoreticians who waged the war against Einstein were A.K.Timiriazev and A.A.Maksimov. Timiriazev was the most influential scientist in the Communist Academy of the Social Sciences and the most active member of the editorial board of the Marxist theoretical journal, Under the Banner of Marxism.

According to Timiriazev, Einstein’s theory opposed ontological materialism and epistemological objectivism. He found Einstein’s theories “at times hailed by the world press” falling “far below the norm” and “a long way from adequate empirical verification”[15]

Timiriazev’s article on Einstein filled Lenin with “a hope that the journal will succeed in effecting an alliance”  “with those modern natural scientists who incline towards materialism and are not afraid to defend and preach it as against the modish philosophical wanderings into idealism and skepticism which are prevalent in so-called educated society.”[16]

The encouragement from Lenin made Timiriazev’s voice get even shriller that, by the mid-1920s, he sarcastically denied in a public meeting having suggested that Einstein be shot.[17]

In 1924, Lenin died and Stalin came to power.

Part -2

Soviet state under Lenin started implementing a censorship on science and free thinking based on Marxist dogma. After the demise of Lenin, in 1924, under Stalin this would develop into a more ominous and logical stage and evolve into a full scale inquisition and purges. In 1926, Werner Heisenberg unveiled his uncertainty principle and Niels Bohr formulated his principle of complementarity. Historian of science, Alexander Vuccinich explains the Marxist response:

Marxist philosophers intensified and consolidated their attack on the epistemological foundations of the Copenhagen school. The defenders of Marxist orthodoxy gradually became accustomed to considering quantum mechanics as ominous an enemy as the theory of relativity. In addition to their specific challenges, the two revolutionary branches of modern physics were seen as having two common characteristics dissonant with Marxist ideology: excessive reliance on mathematical symbolism and excessive reliance on the basic elements of subjective epistemology.[1]

Anti-Science attacks by Marxist theoreticians started having its effects on the quality of scientific establishment. As historian of Soviet science Nikolai Krementsov explains, by 1930s the physics department of prestigious Moscow University had fallen “under the leadership of such professors … most of whom were more active in rhetorical exercises than in actual research.”[2]  Among those professors the most important was A.K.Timiriazev who had been leading the Marxist anti-Einsteinian charge. He not only brought in comrades to wage this ideological crusade against Einstein but also networked with anti-Einsteinian fringe elements in physics outside Russia like Werner Lenard in Germany and Dayton Miller in the United States.[3]

At the same time in Moscow University was Lev Landau an extraordinarily brilliant and exuberant Soviet physicist. His work in analyzing formation and annihilation of electron-positron pair was gaining international fame along with a small group of equally brilliant physicists gathered around him. This group calling themselves Musketeers had such physicists like Matvei Bronshtein, George Gamow and Yuriy Rumer. They also formed a Jazz band.

Landau’s mentor at the university was Vladimir Fock. He tried to make authorities accept theory of relativity by making dogmatic adjustments with dialectical materialism trying to prove that Einstein was on the side of materialism and not idealism. However Marxist theocratic state favored crushing of anything it perceived as a deviation from holy dialectical materialism. Author Paul R. Jospehson details the repressive measures the Marxist state took against the physicist-heretics:

The Musketeers were an irreverent group, known equally for their outrageous social behavior and their cutting-edge physics. Both brought them fame but also the attention of stodgy Marxist scholars who saw the danger of idealism lurking in the new physics and who resented everything about them personally , from their attire to their naked satire of Soviet social norms, especially its communalism.

When Gamow drew cartoons that ridiculed the attempts of Marxist scientists to comprehend the new physics through anachronistic mechanical concepts of ethers, the know-nothings in the Communist Academy of Science attacked them viciously. Each of the members of the Jazz band paid for real and imagined transgressions against the state. Gamow was able to emigrate, ending up at the University of Colorado; Ivanenko was briefly arrested; Bronshtein was shot in 1937; and Landau was in prison for a year before being released.[4]

In 1947, an article on the epistemological problems in quantum mechanics (by Moisei A. Markov of the Physics Institute of the Academy of Sciences) was published by a Soviet journal. Marxist philosopher A. A. Maksimov attacked it because the article was based on Bohr’s complementarity principle. Subsequently in 1948, the editor of the journal was removed and the Copenhagen school’s interpretation of quantum mechanics was decreed as anathema to the Marxist dialectical materialism and banned from the Soviet physics curriculum for the next one decade.[5] Still the Soviet authorities were not very sure that they had exorcised their physics curriculum of all idealist heresies. Sergei Kaftanov, the minister of higher education in the Stalin’s regime, complained in a letter to Deputy Premier Klimenti Voroshilov:

Physics is taught in many educational establishments without any regard to dialectical materialism. . . . Instead of decisively unmasking trends, which are inimical to Marxism-Leninism, some of our scientists frequently adopt idealist positions, which are making their way into higher educational establishments through physics. . . . The modern achievements of physics do not receive consistent exposition on the basis of dialectical materialism in Soviet physics textbooks. . . . The role of Russian and Soviet scientists in the development of physics is treated in a completely inadequate way in textbooks; the books abound in the names of foreign scientists.[6]

Already Marxist ideologues in power have tasted blood. The 1948 conference on biological sciences saw the triumph of Lysenko the notorious pseudo-scientist. Soon a conference on physics too was to be organized by the Party scheduled at March 1949 and physicists panicked that their field too might soon be the victim of ideological cleansing.  The fear of physicists was not unfounded. The organizing committee for the conference accused every important physicist of spreading cosmopolitanism and idealism. Iakov Frenkel was vehemently attacked for his explicit position on the irrelevance of dialectical materialism to the problems of physics.

The draft resolution talked of the duty of Soviet Physics to destroy “mercilessly every hint of cosmopolitanism, which is Anglo-American imperialism’s ideological weapon of diversion.” The draft went on to accuse the leading physicists thus: Lev Landau of “groveling before the West”; Peter Kapitsa of advocating “open cosmopolitanism”; Iakov Frenkel of “uncritically receiving Western physical theories and propagandizing them in our country.”[7]

Soviet physicists were saved from a grand inquisition ironically thanks to the practical power mongering of Marxist dictator. Prof. David Holloway, historian on the international nuclear weapon research puts it bluntly: “Stalin chose the bomb over ideological purity.” Josef Stalin had ordered a core group of physicists to create atomic weapons for Soviet Union. These physicists insisted that inputs from the physicists accused of heresy to Marxism, was essential for the atomic bomb project. According to Gen. V.A. Makhnev, head of the secretariat of the ‘Special Committee on the Atomic Bomb’, Beria the killer hand of Stalin asked Kurchatov the physicist whether it was true that quantum mechanics and relativity theory were idealist, in the sense of antimaterialist.

Kurchatov replied that if relativity theory and quantum mechanics were rejected, the bomb would have to be rejected too. Lev Artsimovich a high ranking Soviet official gives Stalin’s reaction to this resistance from bomb-making physicists to ideological-cleansing of scientists. According to Artsimovich three leading physicists -Kurchatove may have been among them- approached Beria in mid-March 1949 and asked him to call off the conference on the grounds that it would harm Soviet physics and interfere with atomic project.

Beria replied to the physicists that he would not make a decision on this himself but would speak to Stalin. Stalin agreed to cancel the conference, saying of the physicists, “Leave them in peace. We can always shoot them later.”[8] Landau also narrowly escaped execution by personal intervention of physicist Kapista who too was involved in the Bomb project.[9] He also made Landau part of the Hydrogen bomb project which Landau did quit once Stalin was dead.

Attacks on Einstein continued. The language used was bitter and militant. For example the ‘Little Soviet Encyclopedia’ attacked “”a boot-licking attitude towards bourgeois science, a surrender of strategic theoretical positions to the ideology of the bourgeoisie.” In 1953 an article appearing in Soviet magazine ‘Questions of Philosophy’ declared:

The direction into which scientific development has been led by the theory of relativity is a false one. For this reason, we consider it right, not only to reject the whole conception of Einstein, but also to substitute another name for the name expressed by the words “theory of relativity” as applied to problems of space, time, mass and movement for great velocities.[10]

Vladimir Fock the mentor of Landau now tried to make use of the opportunity, which the Soviet Bomb project provided, to remove the stranglehold of party affiliated philosophers on the physics academia. He positioned himself as a Marxist and argued for ceasing the attack on Einstein by the official state Marxist philosophers who in their attacks on the theory of relativity and quantum mechanics, simply exhibited to the world their dogmatic fundamentalism and abundant ignorance of physics. Loren R. Graham, a historian of science, studying the reception to the ideas of Einstein states regarding this aspect Fock:

Although there is no reason to doubt Fock’s basic commitment to Marxism, it is clear that he used Marxism as a vehicle to promote his personal scientific viewpoints…. Before we accuse him of opportunism, however, we should recognize that Fock was a brave leader in the effort to prevent Soviet physics from being subjected to the kind of perversion that occurred in Soviet genetics with the victory of Lysenkoism.[11]

Fock wrote an article defending quantum mechanics as a response to Philosophical Questions of Modern Physics – a Marxist official magazine making attacks on new physics. He also chose to attack militant anti-Einsteinian Marxist Makshimov’s article titled “Against Reactionary Einstenians in Physics”. Though physicists like Kapista, Tamm etc. were not in favour of Fock trying to salvage new physics by giving it a Marxist colour, they appreciated his efforts and given the context this was the most practical way to rescue physics from a fate similar to genetics in Marxist theocratic state. So eleven important atomic physicists including Kurchatov signed a support letter and sent the article to Beria. Beria clearly understood the implication that the Bomb project would have if he were to reject the publication of the article by Fock.

When the article was published it changed the direction of tide in favour of physicists.[12] On 3rd March 1953 Stalin, who was on the verge of unleashing an anti-Semitic witch hunt which would have hurt many Soviet physicists, died.

At last in 1955 when Flock’s interpretation of the theory of relativity was allowed in the Large Soviet Encyclopedia, the article started and ended with quotations from Lenin and the article did not have a section on the general theory of relativity at all. This can be compared with the entry in the soviet Encyclopedia in 1974 by I.Lu.Kobzarev that not only contains no mention of Lenin or Marx but also accepts the international terminology of ‘special’ and ‘general’ theories of relativity.[13] 1955 also saw the Central Committee of the Communist Party in the USSR grudgingly recommending “the technological use” of “bourgeois science”.

Bomb did save the Soviet physicists. But Soviet biologists were not that lucky.


References

 

Part 1

[1] Karl Marx, Private Property and Communism,1844

[2] Karl Marx To Ferdinand Lassalle, Letter dated16 January 1861

[3] Karl Marx To Friedrich Engels, Letter dated 18-June-1862

[4] Karl Marx To Friedrich Engels, Letter dated 7-Aug-1866

[5] Helge Kragh, Quantum Generations; A History Of Physics In The Twentieth Century, University Press, 1999, p.9

[6] Pierre Maurice Marie Duhem, The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory, Princeton University Press, 1991,p.168

[7] Louis de Broglie quoted in Stanely L Jaki, Uneasy Genius: The Life and Work of Pierre Duhem, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1983, p.433

[8] Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel: Depth Psychology and Quantum Physics : Wolfgang Pauli’s Dialogue with C.G. Jung, Springer, 2005, p.45

[9] Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin, Materialism and empirio-criticism, Foreign Languages Press, Moscow, 1970, p.361

[10]  Alexander Vucinich, Einstein and Soviet Ideology, Stanford University Press, 2001, p.16

[11] Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin, Materialism and empirio-criticism, Foreign Languages Press, Moscow, 1970, p.314

[12] Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin, Materialism and empirio-criticism, Foreign Languages Press, Moscow, 1970, p.323

[13] Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin, On Culture and Cultural Revolution, Wildside Press LLC, 2008, p.35

[14] Alexander Vucinich, ibid. p.19

[15] Alexander Vucinich, ibid. p.20

[16] Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin, On the Significance of Militant Materialism, 12-Mar-1922

[17] Paul R. Josephson, Physics and Politics in Revolutionary Russia, University of California Press, 1991, p.229

Part 2

  1. Alexander Vucinich, Einstein and Soviet Ideology, Stanford University Press, 2001, p.22
  2. Nikolai Krementsov,  Stalinist Science, Princeton University Press, 1997, p.277
  3. Alexander Vucinich, Ibid. p.38
  4. Paul R. Josephson, Red Atom: Russia’s Nuclear Power Program From Stalin To Today, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005, p.215
  5. Loren R. Graham, Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1972), p.79
    1. S. Sonin, “Soveshchanie, kotoroe ne sostoialos,” Priroda, 1990, no. 3, p. 99: quoted in David Holloway, How the Bomb Saved Soviet Physics, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Nov 1994, pp.46-54
  6. Ibid.,p.91: : quoted in David Holloway, How the Bomb Saved Soviet Physics, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Nov 1994, pp.46-54
  7. David Holloway, How the Bomb Saved Soviet Physics, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Nov 1994, p.54
  8. Paul R. Josephson, ibid. p.215
  9. Quoted in Philipp Frank, Philosophical Uses of Science, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Apr 1957, p.129
  10. Loren R Graham, The Reception of Einstein’s Ideas: Two Examples from Contrasting Political Cultures in Albert Einstein: Historical and Cultural Perspectives (Ed. Gerald Holton & Yehuda Elkana), Courier Dover Publications, 1997, p.128
  11. Ethan Pollock, Stalin and the Soviet Science Wars, Princeton University Press, 2006, p.95
  12. Loren R Graham,ibid, pp.126-7

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