Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Rotblat Joseph
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 101    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Rotblat Joseph:     more books (77)
  1. Annals of Pugwash 1983: Arms Race at a Time of Decision
  2. Security, Cooperation and Disarmament: The Unfinished Agenda for 1990S, Proceedings of the 46th Pugwash Conference (Social Sciences Series) by Joseph Rotblat, 1998-08
  3. Strategic Defence and the Future of the Arms Race by John P. Holdren, Joseph Rotblat, 1987-06
  4. Atomic energy: A survey by Joseph Rotblat, 1954
  5. Nuclear Non-Proliferation: and the Non-Proliferation Treaty
  6. History of the Pugwash conferences by Joseph Rotblat, 1962
  7. PUGWASH--THE FIRST TEN YEARS History of the Conferences of Science and World Affairs by Joseph Rotblat, 1968
  8. A Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: Desirable? Feasible? by Joseph, Jack Steinberger and Bhalchandra Udgoankar (eds. Rotblat, 1993-01-01
  9. Joseph Rotblat's legacy of peace.(APPRECIATION)(Brief Article): An article from: National Catholic Reporter by David Krieger, 2005-09-16
  10. Joseph Rotblat: from Los Alamos to Pugwash.(Obituary): An article from: Queen's Quarterly by Mel Watkins, 2006-03-22
  11. Remember your humanity.(Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech by Joseph Rotblat)(Transcript)(Cover Story): An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
  12. Overkill: The Story of Modern Weapons, with a Preface By Professor Joseph Rotblat by John Cox, 1977-01-01
  13. Joseph Rotblat: the road less traveled.(founder of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs): An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Susan Landau, 1996-01-01
  14. Disarmament: 1996--Disarmament at a Critical Juncture: Panel Discussions Organized by the Ngo Committee on Disarmament

61. Bulletin 20 - Open Letter By Sir Joseph Rotblat
Sir joseph rotblat Informations about joseph rotblat , recipient of the My name is joseph rotblat. I am 93 years old. I worked as a scientist on the
http://www.inesap.org/bulletin20/bul20art32a.htm
International Network of Engineers and Scientists Against Proliferation
Bulletin 20 - News
Open Letter by Sir Joseph Rotblat
Sir Joseph Rotblat , recipient of the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize, has sent the following Open Letter to the University of California Community. He asks the students, faculty and staff of the University to "raise your voices and demand that the University get out of the business of making weapons of mass destruction".
Dear Students, Faculty and Staff of the UC Community: My name is Joseph Rotblat. I am 93 years old. I worked as a scientist on the Manhattan Project to create the atomic bomb. I resigned from this project in late 1944 when I realized that the Germans would not succeed in creating their own atomic weapons and therefore the Allied powers would not need these weapons to deter the Germans. Since that time I have worked for a world free of nuclear weapons. In 1955, I was one of 11 signatories of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto warning humanity about growing nuclear dangers. In 1957, I was a founder of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. In 1995, I received the Nobel Prize for Peace along with Pugwash for our efforts to rid the world of nuclear weapons. I am writing to ask you to take a great step forward for humanity by disassociating your great University from the oversight and management of the US nuclear weapons laboratories. For more than 50 years, the UC system has provided respectability to these laboratories that carry out research, develop and test nuclear weapons that could destroy civilization and probably the human species.

62. Joseph Rotblat Interview
want to print the interview? click here.
http://www.thecommunity.com/rotblat_interview.html

want to print the interview? click here

want to print the interview? click here

63. Joseph Rotblat Interview
Q You are the last surviving signatory of the RussellEinstein Manifesto in 1955.Tell me why these two great thinkers felt the need to issue it.
http://www.thecommunity.com/rotblat_full.html
Q: You are the last surviving signatory of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto in 1955. Tell me why these two great thinkers felt the need to issue it.
The Russell-Einstein manifesto happened soon after the introduction of the hydrogen bomb, a weapon a thousand times more powerful than the fission bomb used at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. With the Cold War being at its height, there was a great threat that nuclear weapons would be used; we were afraid the two super powers would keep on building their arsenals. If they would use these weapons in a war, then not only our civilization, but even the very existence of the human race might be endangered.
Q: And what do you think is its relevance today?
It has great relevance today, after 50 years, particularly in connection with the election of a president in the United States.
This is a very dangerous policy and goes against the very solemn undertaking by all nuclear weapons states, to get rid of their nuclear arsenals.
Q: I know that you have some strong feelings about the United States policies on nuclear weapons in the last four years. Tell me about this.

64. The Joseph Rotblat Lecture (EU PAL DVD)
David Bohm on mind and matter, phylosophy, language, physics, science, andBlackfoot world view . ministry for peace one day event. David Peat interview.
http://www.jeweltree.co.uk/contentitempage~ContentID~1494.aspx
var ol_css = 53;var ol_fgclass = "HelpPopup_Foreground";var ol_bgclass = "HelpPopup_Background";var ol_textfontclass = "HelpPopup_Text";var ol_captionfontclass = "HelpPopup_Caption";var ol_closefontclass = "HelpPopup_Close"; Welcome to Bodhisattva Productions
DVD's that make
you think? Home Products News Returns Policy ... Existing Customers Search this site ministry for peace held their first one day event at Friends House in London on April 3rd 2004. A DVD of all the presentations is now available. See below.
In 1998 Edward Canfor-Dumas gave a public lecture called The War Habit.
A video of this lecture is available as a free download from here: Download
Check out the Pari centre for New Learning for :
Many thanks to Flower Pictures for the Lotus Flower images used in our Logo.
The Joseph Rotblat Lecture (EU PAL DVD) Professor Joseph Rotblat is an eminent physicist who was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1995.
He was secretary general of Pugwash from 1957 to 1973 and president from 1988.
Pugwash is an international group of scientists who hold peace conferences regularly to discuss world problems and possible solutions.
This lecture was given in conjunction with the Toda Peace Institute.

65. PBS - The Nobel: Visions Of Our Century
joseph rotblat Peace, 1995 joseph rotblat - Peace, 1995 In his Nobelacceptance speech, joseph rotblat said, The time has come to formulate
http://www.pbs.org/kqed/nobel/laureates/rotblat.html
He soon resigned, after learning that Nazi Germany was not researching nuclear weaponry. Due to intense moral conflicts, he switched his field of research to medical physics. Rotblat is professor emeritus of physics at the University of London and has been the president emeritus of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs since 1988. Additional Links Biography - Nobel e-Museum Rotblat on Science and Humanity in the Twentieth Century Article on Rotblat - The International Peace Bureau Pugwash Conferences Official Web Site

66. Pugwash And Russell's Legacy By John R. Lenz
Russell engaged Dr. joseph rotblat, one of its signers, joseph rotblat, bythe way, also received the Bertrand Russell Society Award in 1983.
http://www.users.drew.edu/~jlenz/pugwash.html
Pugwash and Russell's Legacy
by John R. Lenz
This article appears in The Bertrand Russell Society Quarterly , no. 89 (Feb. 1996), pp. 18-24. This WWW edition, created in July 1996, contains some small additions and three longer addenda (marked by "P.S."). See also the (old-fashioned) bibliography at the end for References and Further Reading. In October, 1995, the Nobel Peace Prize for 1995 was awarded to Dr. Joseph Rotblat and (jointly) Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs "for their efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics and in the longer run to eliminate such arms." Rotblat was an associate of Bertrand Russell's, who is regarded as a founding-father of the Pugwash movement which began in 1957. What exactly was Russell's role in Pugwash? News reports (the few I saw) made no mention of Russell (who died in 1970) in describing Pugwash. Yet the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Pugwash constitutes, in some sense, an important recognition of his legacy, and of a cause he championed throughout the last twenty-five years of his life (beginning in 1945 and most intensively from 1949 to 1962). Therefore, I wish to sketch some history of Pugwash and especially of Russell's role in it. The Pugwash Conferences (I will explain the name) began in 1957 with the goal of bringing together scientists from both sides of the Iron Curtain to work for peace and mutual understanding. The immediate motivation was the call to world scientists embodied in the Russell-Einstein Manifesto of 1955.

67. Deriving An Ethical Code For Scientists: An Interview With Joseph Rotblat -- Mer
windy afternoon in late June of 1999, I took a walk with joseph rotblat, rotblat For the same reason I was involved. They should become involved if
http://nextwave.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2000/05/11/8
Deriving an Ethical Code for Scientists: An Interview With Joseph Rotblat BY MELISSA M. MERTL
UNITED STATES
12 MAY 2000
RELATED ARTICLES

PHOTO COURTESY OF STUDENT PUGWASH USA "Remember your humanity, and forget the rest."
Russell-Einstein Manifesto O n a warm, windy afternoon in late June of 1999, I took a walk with Joseph Rotblat , the 1995 co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for his work with the Pugwash Conferences on World Affairs , an international movement originally formed by physicists fighting for disarmament. Rotblat and 200 other people from 31 countries had come to the campus of the University of California, San Diego, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Student Pugwash movement. At 91 years of age, Rotblat smiled easily but walked with an uneven gait. His shock of white hair was blowing in odd angles. A go-cart slowed down. Would Rotblat like to take the available seat to the next lecture? He smiled, and although we had just met 5 minutes previously, he took my arm protectively and waved the cart on. Rotblat was warm and open as he reflected on the personal responsibilities of scientists, a topic he first became personally involved with at age 33 in the year 1941.

68. The Oxford Council On Good Governance: Joseph Rotblat
Dr joseph rotblat is a Nobel Peace Laureate and the founder of Pugwash. Dr rotblat,born in Warsaw in 1908, obtained his MA from the Free University of
http://www.oxfordgovernance.org/index.php/320/0/
Intranet About the OCGG Analysis and Advice Oxford Journal on Good Governance ... Contact The Oxford Council on Good Governance is an independent, non-partisan, and non-profit private company limited by guarantee registered in England
Registration Number:
We are not affiliated with or sponsored by the University of Oxford, the Oxfordshire County Council, or the Oxford City Council
Board of Advisors
The Board of Advisors of the OCGG helps the Board of Directors in providing strategic direction and intellectual guidance to the Council. Joseph Rotblat Member, Board of Advisors Dr Joseph Rotblat is a Nobel Peace Laureate and the founder of Pugwash. Dr Rotblat, born in Warsaw in 1908, obtained his MA from the Free University of Poland in 1932 and a doctorate in Physics from the University of Warsaw where in 1937 he became assistant director of the Atom Physics Institute. In 1939 he started working at the University of Liverpool on the feasibility of the atom bomb with James Chadwick, whom he followed to Los Alamos to take part in the Manhattan Project. In November 1944, when it was confirmed that Nazi Germany would never manage to build the bomb, Dr Rotblat immediately returned to the United Kingdom, the only scientist to quit the Manhattan Project before its devastating conclusion. In 1946, Dr Rotblat co-founded the Atomic Scientists Association and in 1947 he organized "Atom Train," the first big exhibition on peaceful uses and against military applications of nuclear energy.

69. Environmental Peace
Sir joseph rotblat won the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1995 for his work with thePugwash group, of which he is a founding member. A professor of physics,
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/iip/journal/Profiles/rotblat.htm
Environmental Peace : Profiles Sir Joseph Rotblat
Sir Joseph Rotblat won the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1995 for his work with the Pugwash group, of which he is a founding member. A professor of physics, Sir Rotblat has worked to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms.

70. Joseph Rotblat, Remember Your Humanity
joseph rotblat, Remember Your Humanity. Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance speechby joseph rotblat, Oslo, 10 December 1995
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/27a/039.html
Documents menu Date: Mon, 4 Mar 1996 05:47:32 -0600
Date: Sat, 2 Mar 1996 06:53:59 GMT
Organization: PACH
Subject: Nobel Peace Laureate Rotblat's Speech /** disarm.armstra: 96.0 **/
** Topic: Rotblat's Speech **
** Written 12:04 AM Mar 1, 1996 by web:edshaff in cdp:disarm.armstra **
Remember Your Humanity
Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance speech by Joseph Rotblat, Oslo, 10 December 1995
At this momentous event in my life - the acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize, I want to speak as a scientist, but also as a human being. From my earliest days I had a passion for science. But science, the exercise of the supreme power of the human intellect, was always linked in my mind with benefit to people. I saw science as being in harmony with humanity. I did not imagine that the second half of my life would be spent on efforts to avert a mortal danger to humanity created by science, The practical release of nuclear energy was the outcome of many years of experimental and theoretical research, It had great potential for the common good. But the first the general public learned about this discovery was the news of the destruction of Hiroshima by the atom bomb, A splendid achievement of science and technology had turned malign. Science became identified with death and destruction. It is painful to me to admit that this depiction of science was deserved, The decision to use the atom bomb on Japanese cities, and the consequent build up of enormous nuclear arsenals, was made by governments, on the basis of political and military perceptions. But scientists on both sides of the iron curtain played a very significant role in maintaining the momentum of the nuclear arms race throughout the four decades of the Cold War.

71. Rotblat
The following presentation by joseph rotblat, President of the Pugwash Conferenceson Science and World Affairs and the recipient of the 1995 Nobel Peace
http://disarm.igc.org/DisarmTimes/dtrotblat.html
A Nuclear Weapon-Free World Leading to a War-Free World The following presentation by Joseph Rotblat, President of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs and the recipient of the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize, was made at the United Nations on 25 April 1996 as part of a conference sponsored by the NGO Committee on Disarmament, entitled "1996: Disarmament at a Critical Juncture." The Chernobyl accident, ten years ago, has resulted in a number of deaths, much local human suffering which will take years to evaluate, as well as economic upheaval in near and distant countries. But it has further and wider implications. It has attested once more to the close interdependence of the whole world in the nuclear age. It was a warning to us all of the peril in tickling the tail of the nuclear dragon. And, it was a small scale demonstration of the utter disaster that a nuclear war would be. There is nothing new in what I have just said. The effects of nuclear weapons have been known for a long time. But we need to be reminded of them from time to time. Indeed, they should be shouted loudly, loud enough to drown the voices arguing for the retention of nuclear weapons on the grounds that they are just bigger versions of conventional weapons. A Threat to the Existence of the Human Species But, there is yet another consequence of the invention of the atom bomb, a threat that is hardly ever mentioned, although we have been living under this threat ever since the development of nuclear weapons. It is hardly mentioned because it is too dreadful even to think about. This is the threat to the whole of civilization, indeed, to the continued existence of the human species. The chief characteristic of the nuclear age is that for the first time in our history we have acquired the potential to destroy the human species, as well as many other species of animals.

72. Robert Hinde And Joseph Rotblat: War No More, University Of Michigan Press
Robert Hinde and joseph rotblat. The University of Michigan Press publishes booksin political science, ESL and applied linguistics, fiction, theater,
http://www.press.umich.edu/titleDetailDesc.do?id=114248

73. Epic Hope For Humanity Walk : Sir Joseph Rotblat
Nuclear Disarmament Fund to dismantle nuclear weapons Zen Monks end a 60 yearjourney-The Epic Return to Trinity.
http://www.gndfund.org/html/rotblat.html
Home About Donate Sponsors ... The End Result
The Walk Archives Opening Event Keigaku Muchu's Photo Album Phoenix AZ Rev.Miyazaki's Photo Album ... Trinity Site2
Route and Schedule Route Map Walk Schedule Program on 7/16 Schedule on 16-17 ... Other Info -For the first time, we the people will have the ability to accelerate the
- Music Industry to Help Destroy Weapons
Statement by Sir Joseph Rotblat in support of
The Nuclear Weapons Abolition Alliance -(NWAA)
Sir Joseph Rotblat
Nobel Peace Laureate 1995 The Nuclear Weapons Abolition Alliance -(NWAA)
  • Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat -1995 Nobel Peace Prize The British Pugwash Group World Peace Music Awards (501 (c)-3) ActiveMusic (501 (c)-3)
Home About Donate Sponsors ... Sitemap Global Nuclear Disarmament Fund
One Market Street, Spear Tower Building Suite 3600. San Francisco CA, 94105

74. Rotblat - YourDictionary.com - American Heritage Dictionary
Search Mamma.com for rotblat . TYPE IN YOUR WORD CLICK GO! Search. Normal,Definitions, Short defs Rot·blat Listen r t bl t , joseph Born 1908.
http://www.yourdictionary.com/ahd/r/r0314975.html
Search Mamma.com for "Rotblat"
Search: Normal Definitions Short defs (Pronunciation Key) Rot·blat Listen: r t bl t Joseph Born 1908.
Polish-born British physicist who developed medical applications for radioactivity. An outspoken opponent of nuclear weapons, he won the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize.
Back to Search Back
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

75. Preparing For Peace Rotblatt Biog
Professor Sir joseph rotblatt. Professor rotblat, nuclear physicist, resignedfrom working on the development of the atomic bomb and then went on to become
http://www.preparingforpeace.org/rotblatt_biog.htm
Home Up Preparing for Peace The website of the Westmorland General Meeting 'Preparing for Peace' initiative
Professor Sir Joseph Rotblatt
Professor Rotblat, nuclear physicist, resigned from working on the development of the atomic bomb and then went on to become a founder member of the Pugwash Movement concerned with science ethics. He is the last surviving signatory of the 1955 Bertrand Russell-Albert Einstein Manifesto
urging governments to renounce war. In 1995 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his work with the Pugwash Movement and his efforts to renounce the use of atomic weapons. He has been a tireless advocate of peace.
Lecture: The quest for global peace. September 2001 Home Preparing for Peace publications site map ... Contributors

76. Preparing For Peace Lecture. Rotblat: The Quest For Global Peace
Professor Sir joseph rotblat. September 2001. The tragic events of 11 Septemberhave reminded us that “No man is an island”, no country can isolate itself
http://www.preparingforpeace.org/rotblatt.htm
Home Up Preparing for Peace The website of the Westmorland General Meeting 'Preparing for Peace' initiative
The quest for global peace
Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat
September 2001
The tragic events of 11 September have reminded us that “No man is an island”, no country can isolate itself from all the others. Our quest must be for global peace, because peace is indivisible; there cannot be peace in one part of the globe while war, or acts of terrorism occur in another part. We live in a world of ever-increasing interdependence of all inhabitants of the earth, an interdependence largely due to the advances in science and technology. Globalization – whether in its positive or negative aspects – has brought about a situation whereby events in any part of the globe affect us all: in economic, cultural, or political issues, and certainly in military matters; in matters of war and peace. This is so because other advances in science and technology have resulted in the development of weapons of unprecedented mass destruction, the omnicidal weapons, first demonstrated in 1945, in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The destruction of these cities heralded a new age, the nuclear age. The chief characteristic of the nuclear age is that for the first time in the history of civilization we have acquired the technical means to destroy our own species, and to accomplish it, deliberately or inadvertently, in a single event. In the nuclear age the human species has become an endangered species.

77. The Hiroshima Project - References - On Line - Bibliography
rotblat, J. 1981. Nuclear Radiation in Warfare. Taylor Francis, rotblat,joseph, A Tale of Two Cities, New Scientist, January 7, 1988, page 4651.
http://rhizome.org/artbase/22194/HiroshimaProject/References/OnLine/ref11.html
The Hiroshima Project:References:On Line:Bibliography Remembering the Bombing
Bibliography
-. "A vision of ourselves; what the people saw." Time "The 1st atomic bomb," The Youngstown Vindicator . Wed., March 28. Hiroshima-Nagasaki: a pictorial record of the atomic destruction. Nuclear War What's In it For You? . New York: Pocket Books, 1982. Hersey, John. Hiroshima: The Aftermath. New Yorker. About Hiroshima." Phi Delta Kappan Adeney, Bernard T. J ust war, political realism, and faith . American Theological Library Association; Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1988. "After Such Knowledge." The Economist 23 Jan 1993: 80-81. Akiba, Tadatoshi, and Tanso Akinobu. Kodansha, Encyclopedia ofJapan . vol.1 Itasaka, Gen, Alan Campbell, Gyo Furuta, and Takeshi Kokubo. Tokyo, Japan: Kodansha Ltd, 1983 p. 109- 114. International Security 1992, Alperovitz, Gar, "Christianity and Crisis" 1992, v52 pg.13-16 Anonymous. "Victory," Time , 1945, vXLVI, no8, Aug. 20, p19(3). Anthes, Richard A. "Atmosphere." The Software Toolworks Multimedia Encyclopedia , 1992 ed.

78. The International Day Of Peace - September 21
Text of letter from Nobel Laureate, joseph rotblat From Professor Sir josephrotblat FRS London Office. 27 May 2004. Dear Friends,
http://www.internationaldayofpeace.org/rotblat.htm
InternationalDayofPeace.org
is provided by
Pathways To Peace,
the International Secretariat of the
We The Peoples Initiative

a United Nations-designated Peace Messenger Initiative,
in service of
a consortium of NGOs

in association with the
United Nations
Department of Public Information Pathways To Peace P.O. Box 1057 Larkspur, CA 94977 USA Phone: (415) 461-0500 Fax: (415) 925-0330 Email: info@pathwaystopeace.org Web: www.PathwaysToPeace.org Text of letter from Nobel Laureate, Joseph Rotblat PUGWASH CONFERENCES ON SCIENCE AND WORLD AFFAIRS From: Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat FRS London Office 27 May 2004 Dear Friends, With the continuous violence of this past year in my mind, I am writing to you as a Nobel Peace Laureate, the last remaining signatory of the Russell/Einstein Manifesto, and a member of the family of humankind to urge you to use the International Day of Peace to change fundamentally our ways of thinking. We need to educate ourselves to change from a culture of violence to a culture of peace; from the belief that military provisions are needed to protect ourselves, to the understanding that, in the world of the atomic bomb, it is only by preparing for peace that we can protect and ensure our survival. This is a difficult and daring concept, and, like all difficult tasks, it takes time to acquire self-belief and belief in others. But we have no choice because the alternative is unacceptable.

79. University Of Liverpool Department Of Physics - Latest News
Sir joseph rotblat, former member of the Physics department and winner of theNobel Peace Prize in 1995 for his involvement in the Pugwash movement,
http://www.ph.liv.ac.uk/latest_news/news_11_03_03.html
home www.liv.ac.uk DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS Department of Physics Introduction Admissions Research ...
physweb@liv.ac.uk
Visit of Sir Joseph Rotblat
Sir Joseph Rotblat, former member of the Physics department and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1995 for his involvement in the Pugwash movement, will visit the Department on Wednesday 9th April for the naming of one of the lecture theatres in the Chadwick laboratories in his honour.
For details of his career, see:
Sir Joseph Rotblat
Sir Joseph Rotblat Accessibility Staff Students

80. Right
joseph rotblat.
http://www.nobelchannel.com/Theatre/archiveright.sps?vid=586

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 101    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter