Publisher's Synopsis
"Beyond Uncertainty: Heisenberg, Quantum Physics, and the Bombis an excellent work of scholarship and makes Heisenberg's work and life accessible to the general reader, while remaining important and interesting for the historian and scientist. Along with Wernher von Braun, Heisenberg's career under Hitler represents perhaps the best twentieth-century example of a faustian bargain with evil for the advancement of knowledge and science. Cassidy tells this story with nuance and passion."-Mark Walker, author ofNazi Science: Myth, Truth, and the German Atomic Bomb
In 1992, David C. Cassidy's groundbreaking biography of Werner Heisenberg,Uncertainty, was published to resounding acclaim from scholars and critics. Michael Frayn, in thePlaybillof the Broadway production ofCopenhagen, referred to it as one of his main sources and "the standard work in English." Richard Rhodes (The Making of the Atom Bomb) called it "the definitive biography of a great and tragic physicist," and theLos Angeles Timespraised it as "an important book. Cassidy has sifted the record and brilliantly detailed Heisenberg's actions." No book that has appeared since has rivaledUncertainty, now out of print, for its depth and rich detail of the life, times, and science of this brilliant and controversial figure of twentieth-century physics.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union, long-suppressed information has emerged on Heisenberg's role in the Nazi atomic bomb project. InBeyond Uncertainty, Cassidy interprets this and other previously unknown material within the context of his vast research and tackles the vexing questions of a scientist's personal responsibility and guilt when serving an abhorrent military regime.
David C. Cassidyis the author ofJ. Robert Oppenheimer and the American Century,Einstein and Our World, andUncertainty. Professor of natural sciences at Hofstra University, he has served as associate editor ofThe Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. He is the only author to have received both the Science Writing Award from the American Institute of Physics and the Pfizer Award from the History of Science Society for the same book (Uncertainty).