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Jerry Wiesner, Scientist, Statesman, Humanist - Memories and Memoirs (Paperback)
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Jerry Wiesner, Scientist, Statesman, Humanist - Memories and Memoirs (Paperback)
Series: Jerry Wiesner, Scientist, Statesman, Humanist
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How Jerry Wiesner, presidential science adviser and president of
MIT, worked to make a better and safer world, as told by friends
and colleagues and in his own autobiographical writings. The
recurring theme in Jerry Wiesner's varied and distinguished career
was what Senator Edward M. Kennedy calls in the foreword to this
book a "passionate involvement to make a better world, and a safer
world." His odyssey as a public citizen included work as an
acoustician for folklorist Alan Lomax in the Library of Congress,
research at MIT's Radiation Lab and at Los Alamos, service as
President John F. Kennedy's Special Assistant for Science and
Technology, and his years at MIT as professor, dean, provost, and
president. At Los Alamos he received what he called "a valuable
education on issues that were to occupy a large part of my life."
The lessons learned informed his later work on nuclear disarmament;
he was a pivotal adviser on both the 1963 partial Nuclear Test Ban
Treaty and the 1972 ABM Treaty and an early member of the Pugwash
group, an organization of scientists from both sides of the Iron
Curtain. His many accomplishments as president of MIT similarly
reflected his conviction that science and technology cannot be
separate from society. Jerry Wiesner had long planned an
autobiographical book that would combine personal experience and
historical interpretation, covering the wide range of interests
that he compared to "the many parts of a giant jigsaw puzzle," but
the commitments of his postretirement life and a serious stroke in
1989 kept him from completing it. Jerry Wiesner, Scientist,
Statesman, Humanist, conceived by Wiesner's longtime colleague and
friend Walter Rosenblith, fills the gap between the unwritten
autobiography and the still-to-be-written biography, assembling
reminiscences of Wiesner by such friends as Alan Lomax, Theodore C.
Sorensen, and John Kenneth Galbraith, and writings by Wiesner
himself, including the autobiographical pieces that would have been
the basis of his own book.
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