The Modern Mind

Home > Other > The Modern Mind > Page 138
The Modern Mind Page 138

by Peter Watson


  88. Ibid., page 35. See also Collini, Op. cit., page xx.

  89. C. P. Snow, Op. cit., page 14.

  90. Ibid., page 18.

  91. Ibid., pages 29ff

  92. Ibid., page 34.

  93. Ibid., pages 41ff.

  94. MacKillop, Op. cit., page 320.

  95. He was also ill. See: Philip Snow, Op. cit., page 130.

  96. Collini, Op. cit., pages xxxiiiff. This essay, 64 pages, is recommended. Among other things, it relates Snow’s lecture to the changing map of the disciplines in the last half of the century.

  97. Lionel Trilling, ‘A comment on the Leavis-Snow Controversy,’ Universities Quarterly, volume 17, 1962, pages 9–32. Collini, Op. cit., pages xxxvii-iff.

  98. The subject was first debated on television in 1968. See: Philip Snow, Op. cit., page 147.

  CHAPTER 27: FORCES OF NATURE

  1. Michael Polanyi, Science, Faith and Society, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1946.

  2. Ibid., page 14.

  3. Ibid., page 19.

  4. Ibid., pages 6off.

  5. Julian Symons, Introduction to: George Orwell, 1984, Everyman’s Library, 1993, page xvi. See also Ben Pimlott’s Introduction to Penguin paperback edition, 1989.

  6. James Burnham, The Managerial Revolution, or What is Happening in the World Now, New York: Putnam, 1941.

  7. For the problem in physics see: Paul R. Josephson, Physics and Politics in Revolutionary Russia, Los Angeles and Oxford: University of California Press, 1991. For the Lysenko problem in Communist China, see: Laurence Schneider, ‘Learning from Russia: Lysenkoism and the Fate of Genetics in China, 1950–1986,’ in Denis Fred Simon and Merle Goldman (editors), Science and Technology in Post-Mao China, Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Council on East Asian Studies/Harvard University Press, 1989, pages 45–65.

  8. Krementsov, Stalinist Science, Op. cit., page 115.

  9. Ibid., page 107.

  10. Ibid., pages 129–131, 151 and 159.

  11. Ibid., pages 160 and 165.

  12. Ibid., page 169.

  13. Ibid., pages 174, 176 and 179.

  14. Michael Riordan and Lillian Hoddeson, ‘Birth of an Era’, Scientific American: Special Issue: ‘Solid State Century: The Past, Present and Future of the Transistor’, 22 January 1998, page 10.

  15. S. Millman (editor), A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell Systems: Physical Sciences (1923–1980), Thousand Oaks, California: Bell Laboratories, 1983, pages 97ff.

  16. Riordan and Hoddeson, Op. cit., page 11.

  17. Ibid.

  18. Ibid.

  19. Ibid., page 14.

  20. Brian Winston, Media, Technology and Society: A History from the Telegraph to the Internet, London and New York: Routledge, 1998, pages 216–217. And Chris Evans, The Mighty Micro, London: Gollancz, 1979, pages 49–50.

  21. Frank H. Rockett, ‘The Transistor,’ Scientific American: Special Issue: ‘Solid State Century: The Past, Present and Future of the Transistor’, 22 January 1998, pages 18ff.

  22. Ibid., page 19.

  23. Winston, Op. cit., page 213.

  24. Riordan and Hoddeson, Op. cit., pages 14–15.

  25. Ibid., page 13.

  26. Though the publicity helped the sales of the transistor. See: Winston, Op. cit., page 219.

  27. Ibid., page 221.

  28. Paul Strathern, Crick, Watson and DNA, London: Arrow, 1997, pages 37–38. James D. Watson, The Double Helix, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1968; Penguin paperback, 1990, page 20.

  29. Strathern, Op. cit., page 42.

  30. Ibid., page 44.

  31. For rival groups, and the state of research at the time, see: Bruce Wallace, The Search for the Gene, Op. cit., pages 108ff.

  32. Strathern, Op. cit., page 45.

  33. Watson, Op. cit., page 25.

  34. Strathern, Op. cit., page 49.

  35. Ibid., pages 50–53.

  36. Watson, Op. cit., page 79.

  37. Strathern, Op. cit., page 56.

  38. Watson, Op. cit., pages 82–83. Strathern, Op. cit., pages 57–58.

  39. Watson, Op. cit., page 91. Strathern, Op. cit., page 60.

  40. Watson, Op. cit., page 123.

  41. According to Pauling’s biographer, Thomas Hager, ‘Historians have speculated that the denial of Pauling’s passport for the May Royal Society meeting was critical in preventing him from discovering the structure of DNA, that if he had attended he would have seen Franklin’s work …’ Hager, Force of Nature, Op. cit., page 414.

  42. Strathern, Op. cit., pages 70–71.

  43. There was mutual respect. Pauling already wanted Crick to come to Caltech. See Hager, Op. cit., page 414. Strathern, Op. cit., page 72.

  44. Strathern, Op. cit., page 81.

  45. Ibid., page 84, where there is a useful diagram.

  46. Watson, Op. cit., page 164.

  47. Strathern, Op. cit., page 82.

  48. Watson wrote an epilogue about her in his book, praising her courage and integrity. He admitted, too late, that he had been wrong about her. Watson, Op. cit., pages 174–175. Strathern, Op. cit., pages 83–84.

  49. Alan Shepard and Deke Slayton, Moon Shot, New York: Turner/Virgin, 1994, page 37.

  50. James Harford, Korolev: How One Man Masterminded the Soviet Drive to Beat the Americans to the Moon, New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1997, page 121.

  51. See Shepard and Slayton, Op. cit., page 39, for Reuters more fulsome headlines. Harford, Op. cit., page 130.

  52. Although Sputnik I wasn’t large, it was still bigger than what the US planned. See: Charles Murray and Catherine Bly Cox, Apollo: The Race for the Moon, London: Secker & Warburg, 1989, page 23. See also Harford, Op. cit., page 122.

  53. See Young, Silcock, and Peter Dunn, Journey to the Sea of Tranquility, London: Jonathan Cape, 1969, pages 80–81 for discussion of cost and security.

  54. Harford, Op. cit. See note 50 supra.

  55. See Shepard and Slayton, Op. cit., pages 38–39 for other personal details.

  56. Harford, Op. cit., pages 49–50.

  57. Ibid., page 51.

  58. Robert Conquest, The Great Terror, London: Macmillan, 1968; and the same author’s, Kolyma: The Arctic Death Camps, New York: Viking, 1979.

  59. Harford, Op. cit., page 57.

  60. Ibid., page 91.

  61. After Vanguard was announced, the Russians had gloated they would beat the Americans. See: Young, Silcock et al., Op. cit., page 67.

  62. For the impact in America, see: Murray and Cox, Op. cit., page 77.

  63. Harford, Op. cit., pages 114–115.

  64. Ibid., page 110.

  65. But not on Eisenhower, and not at first. See: Young, Silcock et al., Op. cit., page 68.

  66. See: Young, Silcock et al., Op. cit., page 74, one of several contemporary accounts on the subject that makes no reference to Korolev. Harford, Op. cit., page 133.

  67. Shepard and Slayton, Op. cit., page 42.

  68. Harford, Op. cit., page 132.

  69. Sputnik 2 had an even bigger effect than Sputnik 1. See: Young, Silcock et al., Op. cit., pages 70–71.

  70. Harford, Op. cit., page 135.

  71. Ibid., pages 135–136.

  72. For the effect of Sputnik’s launch on Eisenhower’s policy, see: Young, Silcock et al., Op. cit., pages 82ff.

  73. Richard Leakey, One Life, London: Michael Joseph, 1983, page 49.

  74. Virginia Morrell, Ancestral Passions: The Leakey family and the Quest for Humankind’s Beginnings, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995, page 57.

  75. Mary Leakey, Olduvai Gorge: My Search for Early Man, London: Collins, 1979, page 13.

  76. Morrell, Op. cit., pages 80–89.

  77. Partly as a result he wrote books on other aspects of East Africa. See for example, L. S. B. Leakey, Kenya: Contrasts and Problems, London: Methuen, 1936.

  78. Morrell, Op. cit., pages 163–174.

  79. Mary Leakey, Op. cit., pages 83ff.

  80. See Mary Leakey, ibid., pages 5
2–53 for a detailed map of the gorge.

  81. Morrell, Op. cit., page 178.

  82. Ibid., pages 180–181.

  83. Mary Leakey, Op. cit., page 75. See also: Richard Leakey, Op. cit., page 50.

  84. Morrell, Op. cit., page 181.

  85. Ibid.

  86. Mary Leakey, Op. cit., page 74.

  87. L. S. B. Leakey, ‘Finding the World’s Earliest Man’, National Geographic Magazine, September 1960, pages 421–435. Morrell, Op. cit., page 194.

  88. Morrell, Op. cit., page 196.

  89. Ibid., and Richard Leakey, Op. cit., page 49.

  90. Claude Lévi-Strauss and Didier Eribon, Conversations with Lévi-Strauss, Op. cit., page 119.

  91. Karl Popper, The Logic of Scientific Discovery, London: Hutchinson, 1959. (Originally published in German in Vienna in 1934.) See especially, chapters I, IV and V.

  92. Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962; 2nd edition, enlarged, University of Chicago Press, 1970, especially chapter VI, pages 52ff.

  93. Ibid., page 151.

  94. Ibid., pages 137ff.

  95. See the Postscript, pages 174ff, in the second, enlarged edition, referred to in Note 92 above.

  CHAPTER 28: MIND MINUS METAPHYSICS

  1. John Russell Taylor, Hitch: The Life and Work of Alfred Hitchcock, London: Faber & Faber, 1978, page 255.

  2. Donald Spoto, The Life of Alfred Hitchcock: The Dark Side of Genius, London: Collins, 1983, page 420. James Pallot, Jacob Levich et al, The Fifth Virgin Film Guide, London: Virgin Books, 1996, pages 553–554.

  3. Ibid., pages 421–423.

  4. Russell Taylor, Op. cit., page 256.

  5. Spoto, Op. cit., pages 423–424.

  6. Ibid., page 420.

  7. R. D. Laing, The Divided Self: An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness, London: Tavistock, 1959. See also: Adrian Laing, R. D. Laing: A Life, London: Peter Owen, 1994, chapter 8, pages 77–78.

  8. Gilbert Ryle, The Concept of Mind, London: Hutchinson, 1949.

  9. Ibid., pages 36ff.

  10. Ibid., pages 319ff.

  11. S. Stephen Hilmy, The Later Wittgenstein: The Emergence of a New Philosophical Method, Oxford: Blackwell, 1987, page 191.

  12. Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, Oxford: Blackwell, 1953 (edited by G. E. M. Anscombe and R. Rhees). Wittgenstein had begun writing this book in 1931 – see Hilmy, Op. cit., page 50.

  13. P. M. S. Hacker, Wittgenstein, Op. cit., page 8.

  14. Though even professional philosophers do refer to them as games. And see Hilmy, Op. cit., chapters 3 and 4.

  15. Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, Op. cit., page 109, quoted in Hacker, Op. cit., page 11.

  16. Magee (editor), Op. cit., page 89.

  17. Hacker, Op. cit., page 16.

  18. Ibid., page 18.

  19. Many of the paragraphs were originally written at the end of World War Two, which is why he may have chosen pain as an example. See: Monk, Op. cit., pages 479–480. See also Hilmy, Op. cit., page 134, and Hacker, Op. cit., page 21.

  20. Wittgenstein, Op. cit., page 587, quoted in Hacker, Op. cit., page 24.

  21. Ibid., page 31.

  22. Magee (editor), Op. cit., page 90; and Hacker, Op. cit., page 40.

  23. Martin L. Gross, The Psychological Society, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979, page 200.

  24. Ibid., page 201.

  25. H. M. Halverson, ‘Genital and Sphincter Behavior in the Male Infant, ’ Journal of Genetic Psychology, volume 56, pages 95–136. Quoted in Gross, Op. cit., page 220.

  26. See also: H. J. Eysenck, Decline and Fall of the Freudian Empire, London: Viking, 1985, especially chapters 5 and 6.

  27. Ralph Linton, Culture and Mental Disorder, Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1956, quoted in Gross, Op. cit., page 219.

  28. Ray Fuller (editor), Seven Pioneers of Psychology, Op. cit., page 126.

  29. B. F. Skinner, Science and Human Behavior, Glencoe: The Free Press, 1953.

  30. Ibid., pages 263ff.

  31. Ibid., page 375.

  32. Ibid., pages 377–378.

  33. Fuller (editor), Op. cit., page 113.

  34. B. F. Skinner, Verbal Behavior, New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1957.

  35. Ibid., pages 81ff.

  36. Noam Chomsky, Syntactic Structures, The Hague: Mouton, 1957. See also: Roger Smith, The Fontana History of the Human sciences, Op. cit., page 672. And: John Lyons, Chomsky, London: Fontana/Collins, 1970, page 14.

  37. Noam Chomsky, Language and the Mind, New York: Harcourt Brace, 1972, pages 13 and 100ff. Lyons, Op. cit., page 18.

  38. Lyons, Op. cit., pages 105–106.

  39. Fuller (editor), Op. cit., page 117.

  40. Published by Pelican as: John Bowlby, Child Care and the Growth of Love, 1953.

  41. Ibid., pages 18ff.

  42. Ibid., pages 50ff.

  43. Ibid., pages 161ff.

  44. Fernando Vidal, Piaget Before Piaget, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1994, pages 206–207.

  45. Peter E. Bryant, ‘Piaget’, in Fuller (editor), Op. cit., page 133.

  46. Two books out of the many Piaget wrote provide a good introduction to his work and methods: The Language and Thought of the Child, London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Trubner, 1926; and Six Psychological Studies, London: University of London Press, 1968.

  47. Bryant, Op. cit., pages 135ff.

  48. Vidal, Op. cit., page 230.

  49. Bryant, Op. cit., page 136.

  50. Vidal, Op. cit., page 231.

  51. Weatherall, In Search of a Cure, Op. cit., page 254.

  52. Ibid., page 255.

  53. Ibid., page 257.

  54. David Healy, The Anti-Depressant Era, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1997, page 45.

  55. Ibid., pages 61–62. Weatherall, Op. cit., pages 258–259.

  56. Healy, Op. cit., pages 52–54, which discusses the influential Nature article of 1960 on this subject.

  57. Gregory Bateson, ‘Toward a Theory of Schizophrenia,’ Behavioral Science, volume I, Number 4, 1956.

  58. Adrian Laing, Op. cit., page 138.

  59. Ibid., page 71. Former patients told Laing’s son, when he was researching his book on his father, that LSD was beneficial. See: page 71.

  60. Jamison and Eyerman, Seeds of the Sixties, Op. cit., pages 122–123.

  61. Ibid., page 123.

  62. Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1964.

  63. Marcuse, Op. cit., page 156. Jamison and Eyerman, Op. cit., page 127.

  64. Ibid., pages 193ff.

  65. See: Herbert Marcuse, Counter-Revolution and Revolt, London: Allen Lane, 1972, page 105, for the ‘antagonistic unity’ between art and revolution in this context.

  CHAPTER 29: MANHATTAN TRANSFER

  1. Moshe Pearlman, The Capture of Adolf Eichmann, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1961, especially pages 113–120.

  2. Young-Bruehl, Hannah Arendt, Op. cit., pages 328ff.

  3. Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, New York: Viking, 1963, enlarged and revised edition, Penguin, 1994, page 49.

  4. Ibid., page 92.

  5. Young-Bruehl, Op. cit., page 337.

  6. Arendt, Op. cit., page 252.

  7. See Young-Bruehl, Op. cit., pages 347–378 for a full discussion of the controversy, including its overlap with the assassination of President Kennedy.

  8. Laura Fermi, Illustrious Immigrants, Op. cit., pages 153–154.

  9. Erik Erikson, Childhood and Society, New York: W. W. Norton, 1950; Penguin edition 1965, especially Part 4, ‘Youth and the Evolution of Identity.’

  10. Erikson, Op. cit., chapter 8, pages 277–316.

  11. Bruno Bettelheim, ‘Individual and Mass Behavior in Extreme Situations ‘Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1943.

  12. Bru
no Bettelheim, The Empty Fortress, New York: Collier-Macmillan, 1968.

  13. Nina Sutton, Bruno Bettelheim: The Other Side of Madness, London: Duckworth, 1995, chapters XI and XII.

  14. And Bruno Bettelheim, Recollections and Reflections, New York: Knopf, 1989; London: Thames & Hudson, 1990, pages 166ff.

  15. Laura Fermi, Op. cit., pages 207–208.

  16. Richard Rhodes, Op. cit., page 563.

  17. Ibid., page 777.

  18. Kragh, Op. cit., pages 332ff; see also: Alexander Hellemans and Bryan Bunch, The Timetables of Science, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988, page 498.

  19. See: George Gamow, The Creation of the Universe, New York: Viking, 1952, for a more accessible account. Page 42 for his discussion of the current temperature of the space in the universe.

  20. Hellemans and Bunch, Op. cit., page 499.

  21. Murray Gell-Mann, The Quark and the Jaguar, New York: Little Brown, 1994, page 11, for why he chose ‘quark.’

  22. See under ‘quark’, ‘baryon’ and ‘lepton’ in: John Gribbin, Q is for Quantum, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1998, paperback edition 1999, and pages 190–191 for the early work on quarks.

  23. See also: Yuval Ne’eman and Yoram Kirsh, The Particle Hunters, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986, pages 196–199 for a more technical introduction to the eight-fold way.

  24. Victor Bockris, Warhol, London and New York: Frederick Muller, 1989, page 155.

  25. Barron, Exiles and Emigrés, Op. cit., pages 21— 28.

  26. Dore Ashton, The New York School: A Cultural Reckoning, New York: Viking, 1973, pages 123 and 140.

  27. Alice Goldfarb Marquis, Alfred H. Barr: Missionary for the Modern, Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1989, page 69.

  28. Ashton, Op. cit., pages 142–145 and 156.

  29. Ibid., page 175.

  30. Diana Crane, The Transformation of the Avant-Garde: The New York Art World, 1940–1986, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1987, page 45.

  31. Ibid., page 49.

  32. Bockris, Op. cit., pages 112–134, especially page 128.

  33. Hughes, The Shock of the New, Op. cit., page 251.

  34. Crane, Op. cit., page 82.

  35. David Lehman, The Last Avant-Garde: The Making of the New York School of Poets, New York: Doubleday 1998, Anchor paperback 1999. Lehman shows that these poets were also ‘aesthetes in revolt against a moralist’s universe’, see page 358. ‘They believed that the road of experimentation leads to the pleasure-dome of poetry’, page 358.

 

‹ Prev