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         Rotblat Joseph:     more books (77)
  1. World Citizenship: Allegiance to Humanity
  2. Coexistence, Cooperation, and Common Security: Annals of Pugwash, 1986 by Joseph Rotblat, 1988-09
  3. Conversion of Military R&D
  4. Towards a War-Free World: Annals of Pugwash 1994
  5. Nuclear Radiation in Warfare by Joseph Rotblat, 1982-01
  6. Nuclear Weapons: The Road To Zero (Pugwash Monograph) by Joseph Rotblat, 1998-04-16
  7. Polish Physicists: Marie Curie, Joseph Rotblat, Marek Gazdzicki, Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski, Józef Bem, Johann Rafelski, Isidor Isaac Rabi
  8. Radiation Health Effects Researchers: Alexander Catsch, Karl Zimmer, Hans-Joachim Born, Hermann Joseph Muller, Joseph Rotblat, John Gofman
  9. Polish Scientists: Stefan Slopek, Chaïm Perelman, Wladyslaw Turowicz, Joseph Rotblat, Edward Kofler, Kazimierz Leski, Adam Skorek
  10. Academics of the Medical College of St Bartholomew's Hospital: Joseph Rotblat
  11. Polish Refugees: Joseph Rotblat
  12. Roblat Nobel gives hope to Free-Vanunu campaign.(Joseph Rotblat; campaign to free Israeli whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu): An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Samuel H., Jr. Day, 1996-01-01
  13. People Associated With the University of Liverpool: Olaf Stapledon, James Chadwick, David Owen, Lord President of the Council, Joseph Rotblat
  14. Radiobiologists: Radiation Health Effects Researchers, Alexander Catsch, Karl Zimmer, Hans-Joachim Born, Hermann Joseph Muller, Joseph Rotblat

21. The Vega Science Trust - Face2Face With... Joseph Rotblat
Face2Face with ..joseph rotblat. Credits Recording Credits ExternalLinks. 1995 nobel Prize Includes biography. Pugwash Conferences
http://www.vega.org.uk/series/facetoface/rotblat/
Programmes Series / Joseph Rotblat
Face2Face with...
...Joseph Rotblat
Credits
Recording Credits External Links
1995 Nobel Prize

Includes biography Pugwash
Conferences on Science and World Affairs The Russell-Einstein Manifesto Tell a friend
about this page Born in Warsaw in 1908, Joseph Rotblat has had an incredible career spanning nuclear, radiation and medical physics, and international affairs. He worked on the Manhattan Atomic Bomb project during the second world war and then uniquely, quit the project a few months before the war ended when it became clear that Germany would not be able to develop nuclear weapons of its own for use against the allies. He later worked on medical radiation physics and co-founded the Pugwash organisation, a series of conferences focussing on science and world affairs. In 1995 Pugwash and Rotblat were jointly awarded the Nobel peace prize for their efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms. He is still extremely active in politics and world affairs, as well as the work of Pugwash. These clips form part of an extended archive of interviews developed by Vega.

22. The Vega Science Trust - Face2Face : The Science Archive
for their inventions, researcher on the atomic bomb project, scientist and tirelesscampaigner for peace (nobel Peace prize 1995), joseph rotblat discusses his
http://www.vega.org.uk/series/facetoface/
Programmes Series
External Links

The Nobel Foundation
Research Institutes:
The LMB

Sussex University

MIT

Pugwash
...
ITP
, UCSB Tell a friend
about this page A growing archive of famous scientists discuss their lives and discoveries as well as their concerns. Max Perutz Haemoglobin
Max Perutz discovered the structure of Haemoglobin (Nobel Prize 1962), and was the founder of the Laboratory for Molecular Biology in Cambridge, the birthplace of modern molecular biology Fred Sanger Genetic Engineering
A quietly spoken man with two Nobel prizes who, by showing how DNA might be sequenced, laid the foundation for modern genetic engineering. A fascinating insight into the life of a brilliant scientist with a passion for his science and an aversion to the limelight. John "Kappa" Cornforth Steroids
John Cornforth's irrepressible humour comes through as he recounts how he has managed to overcome deafness and pursue a brilliant career in steroid chemistry. These recordings show not only his unique scientific style but also a unique ability to communicate.

23. PBS - The Nobel: Visions Of Our Century
played by nuclear arms in international politics and, in the longer run, to eliminatesuch arms. In his nobel acceptance speech, joseph rotblat said, The
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

24. PBS - The Nobel: Visions Of Our Century
Name That nobel, Nadine Gordimer Literature, 1991, Douglas Osheroff - Physics,1996, joseph rotblat - Peace, 1995, Wole Soyinka - Literature, 1986.
http://www.pbs.org/kqed/nobel/laureates/

25. Lesson Plan -Peace & Tools Of Destruction
Next the class will use the World Wide Web to research informationabout the 1995 winner of the nobel Peace Prize, joseph rotblat.
http://www.cccoe.net/tdf/Wolff/ptd/lesson.html
Lesson Plan:
Nobel Peace Prize Press Conference Class Time Required
: 3-4 Class Periods
Overview and Purpose:
General Goals:

1. To increase reading comprehension through students analyzing appropriate reading strategies such as summarizing and note taking.
2. To increase students understanding of the effect of human decisions and actions on our environment.
Specific Objectives:
1. Students will examine the relationships between science, personal responsibility, world peace and politics.
2. Students will assess the contributions of Nobel laureates.
3. Students will analyze data using the Web for information gathering.
4. Students will work collectively to find conclusions of posed questions.

26. Joseph Rotblat
Translate this page joseph rotblat ha studiato a Varsavia e Liverpool dove ha preso il PhD in fisica alPugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs il Premio nobel per la pace
http://www.uspid.dsi.unimi.it/past/rotblat.html
Joseph Rotblat
Joseph Rotblat ha studiato a Varsavia e Liverpool dove ha preso il PhD in fisica prima della seconda Guerra Mondiale. E' stato Professore di Fisica a Londra dal 1950 fino al 1976 e da allora Professore Emerito. E' stato uno degli undici firmatari del Manifesto Einstein-Russel Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs Ha ricevuto assieme al Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs il Premio Nobel per la pace 1995 Motivazione della Norwegian Nobel Committee per l'assegnazione del premio Nobel. Il discorso di accettazione del premio Nobel
Seminari in Italia
Nel novembre '95 il Prof. Rotblat ha tenuto alcuni seminari

27. Joseph Rotblat, Remember Your Humanity
disarm.armstra **. Remember Your Humanity. nobel Peace Prize Acceptancespeech by joseph rotblat, Oslo, 10 December 1995. At this momentous
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.

28. CNN - Nobel Prizes Awarded - Dec. 10, 1995
nuclear weapons would be a dangerous world. On the contrary, it wouldbe a safer world. . joseph rotblat, nobel Peace Prize Winner
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9512/nobel_prize/
Nobel Prizes awarded
Peace winner sees 'safer world' without nuclear weapons
December 10, 1995
Web posted at: 3:00 p.m. EST (2000 GMT) OSLO, Norway (CNN) British scientist Joseph Rotblat was formally awarded the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize on Sunday and immediately appealed for a world free of nuclear weapons and an end to war. Speaking after he and his co-laureate, the Pugwash movement that he heads, were presented with the award, Rotblat warned that current nuclear thinking is "a recipe for proliferation" and "a policy for disaster."
"There is no evidence a world without nuclear weapons would be a dangerous world. On the contrary, it would be a safer world."
Joseph Rotblat, Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Rotblat is among 11 Nobel Prize winners who were notified in October of their selection. He received his honor in Oslo, Norway. The 10 others were awarded their prizes at ceremonies Sunday in Stockholm, Sweden. Seven of this year's prize-winners were Americans: medicine laureates Edward Lewis and Eric Wieschaus; economics winner Robert Lucas; physicists Martin Pert and Frederick Reines; and chemistry nominees Mario Molina and Frank Sherwood Rowland. They were joined at the Stockholm ceremony by German medicine nominee Christiane Nuesslein-Volhard, Dutch chemistry joint-winner Paul Crutzen and Irish literature laureate Seamus Heaney. Each prize this year carries an award of $1.1 million.
First anti-nuclear protester
The Polish-born Rotblat, 87, worked on the Manhattan Project to prevent a Nazi victory in World War Two, but quit in 1944, the year before the first atomic bombs were dropped on Japan. (

29. WISE NC: NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR PUGWASH
WISE NC 442.4377; The Norwegian nobel Committee said it awarded the $1 million nobelpeace prize to joseph rotblat and the Pugwash Conferences on Science and
http://www.antenna.nl/wise/442/4377.html
published by WISE News Communique on October 27, 1995
Nobel peace prize for Pugwash
The Norwegian Nobel Committee said it awarded the $1 million Nobel peace prize to Joseph Rotblat and the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs this year, 50 years after nuclear bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, to encourage the world to now rid itself of the nuclear threat. Joseph Rotblat is the founder of Pugwash. He is a scientist who resigned from the Manhattan Project (to develop nuclear weapons during World War II) and then dedicated his life to campaigning against the nuclear weapons it developed. (442.4377) WISE-Amsterdam - The awarding of the Nobel to Rotblat and Pugwash was unexpected, with the Nobel Committee passing over better-known nominees including former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and the politicians who were crucial in bringing about a ceasefire in Northern Ireland. "It is the committee's hope that the award of the Nobel Peace Prize for 1995 to Rotblat and to Pugwash will encourage world leaders to intensify their efforts to rid the world of nuclear weapons," the Nobel Committee said in its citation. The panel hoped the award would also send a clear message of protest to the French and Chinese governments over their recent nuclear tests. Rotblat, a Polish-born British citizen, was the only scientist to resign from the Manhattan Project. Since leaving the project in 1944, he has campaigned for nuclear disarmament, and until recently also worked at London's St. Bartholomew's Hospital, specializing in nuclear medicine.

30. Page 20
The Norwegian nobel Committee announced on 13 October that is had decided to awardthe nobel Peace Prize for 1995, in two equal parts, to joseph rotblat and to
http://www.liv.ac.uk/recorder/dec1995/rec21.html
    Electronic Recorder - December 1995
    NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
    Joseph Rotblat, a graduate and a former Director of Research in Nuclear Physics of the University of Liverpool, has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 1995. Professor Joseph Rotblat (above). The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced on 13 October that is had decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 1995, in two equal parts, to Joseph Rotblat and to the 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. Joseph Rotblat came to Liverpool from Poland in April 1939 and was prevented from returning by Germany's invasion of his country. He had envisaged the concept of the atom bomb and had convinced himself of the vital necessity for the Allies to develop it first. He approached Professor (later Sir) James Chadwick with a proposal for research on the feasibility of the bomb and the work was undertaken using the cyclotron that Chadwick had built in the basement of the George Holt Building (now occupied by Metallurgy and Materials Science). In 1943, the Liverpool team including Chadwick and Rotblat, moved to the United States to work on what was called the Manhattan Project. There was always in his mind the conflict with his central philosophy that science should serve the humanitarian and peaceful purposes of mankind, and towards the end of 1944, as the war in Europe approached its final stages, he decided to return to Liverpool. In the years that followed he turned increasingly towards the biological and medical applications of nuclear physics, initially in Liverpool and eventually as Professor of Physics of London University at St Bartholomew's Hospital.

31. Precinct - Article 2
nobel Committee announced on Friday, 13 October that it had decided to award thenobel Peace Prize for 1995, in two equal parts, to joseph rotblat and to the
http://www.liv.ac.uk/precinct/Nov95/prec2.html
Electronic Precinct November 1995
Nobel Peace Prize
Joseph Rotblat, a graduate and a former member of staff, has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 1995. The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced on Friday, 13 October that it had decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 1995, in two equal parts, to Joseph Rotblat and to the 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. In a letter congratulating Professor Rotblat on the award of the Nobel Peace Prize the Vice-Chancellor wrote: `This is a very great honour and it is well deserved. I know that I speak for every member of the University, and particularly those in the Department of Physics, when I say how proud we are that a graduate of this University, and a former colleague, has been recognised in this way. It is a unique occasion in the University's history.' Professor Rotblat is a former Director of Research in Nuclear Physics of the University of Liverpool and was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Science in 1989. In his oration Professor Fred Norbury described how Joseph Rotblat arrivie arrived here in April 1939 from his native Poland, choosing Liverpool in preference to Paris. He had envisaged the concept of the atom bomb and had convinced himself of the vital necessity for the Allies to develop it first. He approached Professor James Chadwick (later Sir James Chadwick) with a proposal for research on the feasibility of the bomb and the work was undertaken using the cyclotron that Chadwick had built in the basement of the George Holt Building (now occupied by Metallurgy and Material Science). He went on to join Chadwick's team in Los Alamos working on what was called the Manhattan Project.

32. Joseph Rotblat
Translate this page De 1950 à 1976, rotblat est physicien en chef à l’Hôpital St-Barthélemy cofondateurpuis président de Pugwash, avec qui il partage le prix nobel de la
http://www.nobel-paix.ch/bio/rotblat.htm

33. Joseph Rotblat
At the nobel ceremony, the chairman praised Pugwash and joseph rotblat 'Whilepainting a clear picture of the great dangers, they have at the same time
http://www.ppu.org.uk/learn/infodocs/people/pp-rotblat1.html
JOSEPH ROTBLAT CONTENTS
the young scientist

turning points

building the atomic bomb in

America
...
a world without war

See also:
science and responsibility

science and understanding

the nuclear age

20th century poetry A n excellet book about the making of the atom bomb is - The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Richard Rhodes. Available here via Amazon Co Uk 'A Statement on Nuclear Weapons' The first test explosion of a hydrogen bomb was carried out by the USA in 1952, the year Britain exploded its first test atomic bomb. The Soviet Union exploded its first hydrogen bomb in 1953. Joseph Rotblat first met the mathematician and philosopher Bertrand Russell in 1954, when they both appeared on one of the earliest BBC 'Panorama' programmes. It was about the hydrogen bomb. Bertrand Russell was very disturbed by the information Joseph Rotblat gave him, and at Christmas gave a radio broadcast called 'Man's Peril', about the consequences of nuclear war. Convinced that since scientists had created the nuclear bomb, it was scientists who should try to prevent nuclear warfare, Russell got in touch with Albert Einstein, and asked for - and got - his support. Russell drafted the 'Statement on Nuclear Weapons'; and it was signed by Einstein only days before his death. It was also signed by ten other scientists, one of whom was Joseph Rotblat. The Statement was published in July 1955, and became known as the Russell-Einstein manifesto It was more than a commitment to abolish nuclear weapons. It recognised the 'titanic struggle between communism and anti-communism', and the risks of war that it carried. It recognised the tremendous destructive power of the H-bomb. It recognised the appalling and lasting effects of large amounts of radiation. It recognised that an arms race had already begun. The manifesto put the question: 'Shall we put an end to the human race, or shall mankind renounce war?' and called on the world's scientists to 'assemble in conference to appraise the perils that have arisen as a result of the development of weapons of mass destruction'.

34. Joseph Rotblat
(He was awarded a nobel Prize for this work in 1935.) Chadwick worked at the Universityof Liverpool; when he heard of joseph rotblat he invited him to join
http://www.ppu.org.uk/learn/infodocs/people/pp-rotblat.html
JOSEPH ROTBLAT CONTENTS
the young scientist

turning points

building the atomic bomb in

America
...
a world without war

See also:
science and responsibility

science and understanding

poetry agaist the bomb

email this page to a friend
The young scientist Joseph Rotblat was born in Warsaw, Poland's capital city, in 1908. He remembers the good days before World War 1: his father ran a successful transporting business, young Joseph had a pony to ride, and there were idyllic summer holidays in the countryside. But when war came, Joseph's father was driven to distilling illicit vodka in the basement to make money for his family to survive. But Joseph was determined to get an education. He had discovered what would become his life-long love of science, and was determined to become a physicist. So he worked as an electrician by day and studied by night, and in 1932 graduated from the Free University of Poland with a degree in science. He was immediately offered a research post in the Radiological Laboratory of Warsaw. He gained a doctorate in physics from Warsaw University in 1938. By then he had met and married Tola Gryn. The British physicist James Chadwick, meanwhile, had discovered the neutron. (He was awarded a Nobel Prize for this work in 1935.) Chadwick worked at the University of Liverpool; when he heard of Joseph Rotblat he invited him to join the physics team there in 1939. Rotblat was delighted: the equipment at Liverpool was far better than anything in Warsaw. He was particularly interested in the physics laboratory's cyclotron (a machine for making particles move faster) and dreamed of building one in Warsaw one day. He went to Liverpool - the first time he had travelled outside Poland - with high hopes.

35. Joseph Rotblat
Who, to his everlasting credit, resigned his position at Los Alamos. joseph rotblatleft Los Last year rotblat was awarded the nobel Peace Prize for
http://www.scitec.auckland.ac.nz/~king/Preprints/book/explod/nuclears/rotb.htm
Return to Genesis of Eden? From Fission Research to a Prize for Peace Scientific American January 1996 Joseph Rotblat believes scientists must bear a moral responsibility for their discoveries. Recollections of a Nuclear War
Philip Morrison Scientific American Aug 95 (extract) The Trinity test, the first test of a nuclear bomb went off as planned on July 16th 1945 , leaving life-long indelible memories. None is as vivid for me as that brief flash of heat on my face, sharp as noonday for a watcher 10 miles away in the cold desert predawn, while our own false sun rose on the earth set again. For most of the 2,000 technical people at Los Alamos-civilians military and student-soldiers-that was was the climax of our actions. The terrifying deployment less than a month later appeared as anticlimax, out of hands, far away. The explicit seaming had hoped for never came; the nucler transformation of warfare was kept secret from the world until disclosed by the fires of Hiroshima. Nudear War in Embryo Legacy of the Bomb

36. Bulletin 20 - Joseph Rotblat
Bulletin 20 Author. joseph rotblat. shared in 1995 the nobel Peace Price with thePugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. E-mail pugwash@qmw.ac.uk.
http://www.inesap.org/bulletin20/rotblat.htm
International Network of Engineers and Scientists Against Proliferation
Bulletin 20 - Author
Joseph Rotblat
shared in 1995 the Nobel Peace Price with the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. E-mail: pugwash@qmw.ac.uk The Nuclear Issue After the Posture Review Open Letter

37. Reporter - Nobel Laureate Rotblat To Visit Imperial
PROFESSOR joseph rotblat, 1995 winner of the nobel Peace Prize, will give a lecturePugwash and the Nuclear Issue, on Tuesday, 11 February at 18.00, in Lecture
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/P3952.htm
Issue 126, 5 February 2003 Contents Too little too late... Rector's view on White Paper The insider view Sharks are gathering for Earthwatch day... Link between memory and neurofeedback ... Media spotlight Nobel Laureate Rotblat to visit Imperial
PROFESSOR Joseph Rotblat, 1995 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, will give a lecture Pugwash and the Nuclear Issue, on Tuesday, 11 February at 18.00, in Lecture Theatre 1, Blackett Laboratory, department of physics, South Kensington campus. David Windisch, Chair of ICU Student Pugwash, writes: "While the global political context has changed during the years since the first Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs in 1957, the movement's main purpose is still the same - to bring together scientists and students from around the world to discuss the ethical and political issues science must face. "Apart from the main concern about nuclear arms, issues such as the elimination of armed conflicts, or the environment, have also moved onto the agenda of recent Pugwash Conferences. "Professor Rotblat is, as were Albert Einstein and Bertrand Russell, one of the scientists who inaugurated the movement in 1955. Born in Poland in 1908, he was one of the first scientists realising the potential of nuclear fission at the outbreak of the Second World War.

38. Rotblat, Joseph. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language: Fou
2000. rotblat, joseph. SYLLABICATION Rot·blat. PRONUNCIATION r t bl t. Anoutspoken opponent of nuclear weapons, he won the 1995 nobel Peace Prize.
http://www.bartleby.com/61/49/R0314975.html
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39. Felix.unife.it/Root/d-General/d-Man-and-society/t-Nobel-prize-1995-to-Rotblat-Pu
The Norwegian nobel Committee has decided to award the nobel Peace Prize for 1995,in two equal parts, to joseph rotblat and to the Pugwash Conferences on
http://felix.unife.it/Root/d-General/d-Man-and-society/t-Nobel-prize-1995-to-Rot
From nobelsrv@www.nobel.ki.seFri Oct 13 14:12:27 1995 Date: Fri, 13 Oct 1995 13:08:18 +0100 From: Nobel Foundation WWW Server

40. Soka Gakkai Internacional
Translate this page joseph rotblat tenía 91 años cuando nos reunimos, por segunda Reino Unido, en 1997,el profesor rotblat llegó a es un laureado con el Premio nobel y, además
http://www.sgi.org/spanish/inicio/quarterly/31/CiudadanosMundiales.html
NOTICIAS SGI QUARTELY Por Tema NOTAS DE PRENSA DAISAKU IKEDA SGI Quarterly Retratos de ciudadanos mundiales Una serie de ensayos del presidente Ikeda en los que reflexiona sobre sus encuentros con diversas figuras mundiales. Guerrero de la paz Profesor Joseph Rotblat Presidente emérito de las Conferencias Pugwash Joseph Rotblat tenía 91 años cuando nos reunimos, por segunda vez, en febrero de 2000. Aun a esa edad él continuaba recorriendo el mundo con inmutable vigor, la espalda recta y un ritmo aún más rápido que el de un hombre en la flor de su vida. ¿Por qué es tan activo? “Yo tengo un objetivo esencial”, me dijo él, “y me he mantenido siempre muy decidido en su búsqueda. Eso, creo, es lo que me ha permitido mantener el vigor”. El objetivo al que se refería Rotblat era su determinación de erradicar del mundo las armas nucleares y la guerra en sí. Cuando el Instituto Toda para la Paz y la Investigación de Políticas realizó una conferencia internacional sobre “Prerrequisitos no nucleares para el desarme nuclear" en el Reino Unido, en 1997, el profesor Rotblat llegó a la sala de la conferencia dos horas y media más temprano para revisar todo el equipo, los proyectores y los micrófonos, y para asegurarse de que todo estuviese instalado perfectamente. Debido a que es un laureado con el Premio Nobel y, además, de avanzada edad, uno podría esperar que llegaría a la hora justa de acuerdo con lo programado, haciendo su camino hacia la sala de conferencias sin prisa y esperando que todo estuviese dispuesto para él. Pero el profesor Rotblat siempre lo confirma todo por su propia mano, sus propios ojos y su propio oído, y lo hace alegre, cortés y completamente.

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