For most of the second half of the twentieth century, the United
States and its allies competed with a hostile Soviet Union in
almost every way imaginable except open military engagement. The
Cold War placed two opposite conceptions of the good society before
the uncommitted world and history itself, and science figured
prominently in the picture. " Competing with the Soviets" offers a
short, accessible introduction to the special role that science and
technology played in maintaining state power during the Cold War,
from the atomic bomb to the Human Genome Project.
The high-tech machinery of nuclear physics and the space race
are at the center of this story, but Audra J. Wolfe also examines
the surrogate battlefield of scientific achievement in such diverse
fields as urban planning, biology, and economics; explains how
defense-driven federal investments created vast laboratories and
research programs; and shows how unfamiliar worries about national
security and corrosive questions of loyalty crept into the
supposedly objective scholarly enterprise.
Based on the assumption that scientists are participants in the
culture in which they live, "Competing with the Soviets" looks
beyond the debate about whether military influence distorted
science in the Cold War. Scientists' choices and opportunities have
always been shaped by the ideological assumptions, political
mandates, and social mores of their times. The idea that American
science ever operated in a free zone outside of politics is, Wolfe
argues, itself a legacy of the ideological Cold War that held up
American science, and scientists, as beacons of freedom in contrast
to their peers in the Soviet Union. Arranged chronologically and
thematically, the book highlights how ideas about the appropriate
relationships among science, scientists, and the state changed over
time.
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