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Arthur von Hippel: The Scientist and the Man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2011

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Abstract

“We will not be intimidated!” is one of the mottos Arthur R. von Hippel lived by. From refusing to salute Hitler to starting a unique interdisciplinary university laboratory–the Laboratory for Insulation Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology–von Hippel followed his principles, laying the foundations for modern materials research and distinguishing himself as a pioneering scientist, an inspirational mentor, and a devoted family man. This article shows the personal and professional contexts within which von Hippel–the namesake of the Materials Research Society's highest award–emerged as a scientific leader and role model of interdisciplinarity, as seen through the eyes of his son, Frank N. von Hippel, physicist, professor of public and international affairs, and co-director of the Program on Science & Global Security at Princeton University.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2005

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References

Notes and References

1Franck, James, who was Jewish, resigned his position as professor (a government appointment in Germany) when Hitler came to power but did not leave Germany until he had been able to place his Jewish assistants and von Hippel, who had married his daughter, Dagmar, safely abroad. Both Franck and Niels Bohr joined the secret U.S. nuclear weapons development program during World War II and separately tried to influence U.S. policy in a direction that they hoped would prevent a postwar nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union. Von Hippel's book Dielectrics and Waves was dedicated to Franck and Bohr, and his first U.S.-born child, the author of this article, was named after them.Google Scholar
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7A series of novels by James Fenimore Cooper named after their hero, Natty Bumppo, who also was known as “Leatherstocking” and “Hawkeye”: The Pioneers (1823), The Last of the Mohicans (1826), The Prairie (1827), The Pathfinder (1840), and The Deerslayer (1841).Google Scholar
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