Otto Hahn: Responsibility and Repression
Abstract
The role that Otto Hahn (1879-1968) played in the discovery of nuclear fission and whether Lise Meitner (1878-1968) should have shared the Nobel Prize for that discovery have been subjects of earlier studies, but there is more to the story. I examine what Hahn and the scientists in his Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry in Berlin-Dahlem did during the Third Reich, in particular, the significant contributions they made to the German uranium project during the Second World War. I then use this as a basis for judging Hahn's postwar apologia as the last president of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society and first president of its successor, the Max Planck Society.
- Publication:
-
Physics in Perspective
- Pub Date:
- May 2006
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2006PhP.....8..116W
- Keywords:
-
- Otto Hahn;
- Lise Meitner;
- Fritz Strassmann;
- Otto Robert Frisch;
- Gottfried von Droste;
- Albert Einstein;
- Siegfried Flügge;
- Samuel Goudsmit;
- Fritz Haber;
- Werner Heisenberg;
- Heinrich Hörlein;
- Max von Laue;
- Ernst Telschow;
- Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker;
- Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry;
- Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry;
- Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics;
- Kaiser Wilhelm Society;
- Max Planck Society;
- National Socialism;
- National Socialist institutions;
- Nazi Germany;
- Nobel Prizes;
- Second World War;
- German uranium project;
- Alsos Mission;
- Farm Hall;
- FIAT reports;
- atomic bomb;
- nuclear energy;
- nuclear fission;
- nuclear reactor