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Review: Beyond Uncertainty by David C Cassidy

Was Heisenberg building a nuclear bomb for the Nazis or secretly siding with the Allied forces?
Review: Beyond Uncertainty by David C Cassidy
(Image: Bellevue Literary Press)

The title Beyond Uncertainty is a multi-level pun. It is a sequel to Uncertainty, Cassidy’s 1991 biography of physicist , whose uncertainty principle formed the foundation of quantum theory. Uncertainty was the basis for , the hit play about shadowy meetings between Heisenberg and during the second world war. The title also signals the hope that historians can finally unravel Heisenberg’s ambiguous role in the German nuclear bomb project.

Cassidy justifies writing this updated biography by drawing on now-declassified documents and previously private letters. Most intriguing is a cache of livid – but never mailed – letters Bohr wrote to Heisenberg in 1957. Heisenberg had just claimed publicly that he had tipped off Bohr in Copenhagen about Germany’s slow progress on nuclear weapons in order to help avert Allied attacks. Heisenberg wanted to save lives. Bohr remembered otherwise: Heisenberg did his damnedest to deliver nukes.

Overall, it seems Heisenberg was full of contradictions. He supported his Jewish colleagues, yet exploded when minor Nazi officials accused him of being a malcontent who was “Jewish in spirit”. He begged for uranium research funds, then claimed he didn’t want Hitler to win – and then defended German science, bemoaning the superior resources of the US’s Manhattan project.

Cassidy’s best insight is that Heisenberg withdrew into science as a refuge amid a turbulent war. But that withdrawal undermines any hope of moving beyond the uncertainty about Heisenberg as good guy or bad guy – or both.

David C. Cassidy

Bellevue Literary Press

Topics: Books and art

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