Stargazing in the Atomic Age
Transcription
Stargazing in the Atomic Age
Anne Goldman Stargazing in the Atomic Age " I. Whatdo you care whatotherpeople think?" When I was a girl,myfathers behaviorin the Boston suburbwherewe lived struckme as weird.His volatilitywas embarrassing.His emotionalismwas out ofplace. He was a Rachmaninoffcadence whereeveryoneelse playedMozart, a medievalgargoyleperchedatop a Lutheranchurch,a mai tai in themidstof the odorless,colorlessgin and tonicsthatwere Bostons favoritedrink.When I grewup and moved away,I recognizedhis eccentricity forwhatit was- the incompleteconversionof this assimilatedJew,all quick, erraticmotion and nervousenergy,to thephlegmaticchillofNew England.My parentsbothgrew up in Wisconsin,but the freezeof a midwesternwinterwas balmycompared with the frigidityof Boston manners. Where Dad worked,at the Harvard School ofPublic Health,theatmospherewas cool as theinsideofa church- as werethefaculty, severalofwhom he had roomedwithat Eliot House tenyears earlierbutneverdinedwith,sincetheuniversity's eatingclubsin the1950swere In their spacious Cambridgehouses the facultyremained strictlysegregated. secluded,thegracefulcurvesofhighbrickwalls separatingtheirparklikeacres fromthejanglystreettraffic of nearbyHarvard Square. In thecontextofthecitysstrictcomposure,an uprightnessthathoarded physicalenergyas if everymovementwere a waste of vital spirit,my dads Jewishexuberance must have seemed shockinglyflamboyant.And, indeed, he was all violentactivity:he screamedhimselfhoarse when we squabbled in the car,darted across streetsbeforethe walk sign,rifledwildlythroughthe stacksof papers in his officesearchingforthe sheet he had stashed in some huffedhis waythroughcar dealerplace because itwas "important," forgotten when some salesman offered statistics thatcontradictedthemost ships hapless [271] This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 272 THE GEORGIA REVIEW basic laws of physics,ate too much offthe partytrayshis Harvardcolleagues nibbledfrom,and blew into our house at the end of the day- disheveledbut triumphantas some Greek generalreturninghome at the end of the Trojan War. Ignoringmymothers demurrals,mydad typicallywore sneakerson the several occasions each year when our familydrove into the cityto hear the Boston SymphonyOrchestra.He commentedwithgleefulsarcasmon whatever stupiditypassed forconvention,and he took the talk of car mechanics moreseriouslythantheabstractsofsome ofhiscolleagues,who massagedtheir data, he felt,renderingtheirexperimentsunethicaland valueless at a stroke. He spoofed Harvards sanctimoniousdinnerpartiesin the mock prayerwith whichhe inauguratedfamilysuppers("Good food,good meat,good God lets eat"). And, aggressivelycompetitive,he never missed an opportunityto let the more socially conscious facultyof the School of Public Health know by example thattheirinheritedfacilitywiththe intellectualelitecould not stand up to his own uncouth,nativebrilliance. Years later,reading Nobel prize-winner Richard Feynmans memoir, , Mr.Feynman!" I recognizedin thisphysicistsindifference "SurelyYou'reJoking to social protocoland his failureto suffer foolsgladlya "curiouscharacter"like A physicistfriendat mydad. Feynmantoo had a low toleranceformediocrity. the LawrenceBerkeleyLab remembersthattheNobel winnerrefused,pointblank,to attendmeetings:theywere fineforhis colleagues,he thought,but his own brain was too valuable to idle away in committee.This pronouncementmusthave met witha mixed reception,but it was deliveredwithFeynmans usual aplomb. The anecdote he recountedas a new graduatestudentat Princetonmighthave been one of my fathers own. Feynmancould sniffout pretentiousnesslike a police dog trainedto findheroin,and at Princetonhe foundplentyofgrandiloquence.The university was "an imitationofan English school" complete with phony Britishaccents. The "Mahstah of Residences . . . was a professorof Trench littrachaw'"who invitedhim to a tea party- at which he distinguishedhimselfin his inimitableJewishway.Asked whether he would like cream or lemon in his tea,the scientistreplied,"Til have both, thankyou,'"at whichthestrickendeans wifecould onlymanage,"Surelyyou're joking, Mr. Feynman."Here was Dad - exceptthathe,as all fourofus children knew,would have asked forfivespoons of sugar,too. I have inheritedmyfathers contemptforpieties- ceremoniesofall kinds make me squirm. Like a teenagerincapable of suffering in silence,I satirize This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 273 homilies at weddingsor funeralswithwhisperedaspersions,as ifto consent to ritualwere to surrenderindependenceof mind. Of course thisirreverence made fora stormychildhood,since theedictsI resistedmostweremyfathers. hard to break. I am, afterall, my Still,defianceof traditionis mybirthright: fathers daughter.I have absorbed his Jewishhabits of mind. But because I spentmyschool yearswithintheshadow oftheOld NorthChurch,I associate observancewithNew EnglandcultureratherthanwithJewishorthodoxy.Two hundredyearsafterthe RevolutionaryWar,the tree-linedstreetsof Concord and Lexingtonwindin serpentinecurvespaststandsofpine and theoccasional fieldofcornleftintactas a ruralreminderoftwocenturiesbefore.School trips promptedus to recall "our"heritage:the smallishboulder on the edge of the wind-sweptcoast thatwas PlymouthRock, the cotton-smockedwomen who dipped candles and made soap fromlye in perennial re-creationof Salem's Puritanpast. Route 126,once a dirtpath upon which Paul Reveretraveledon his midnightride,is choked now withtraffic fromthe burgeoningcomputer industry.The Daughtersof the AmericanRevolutionstillorganizean annual restagingoftheRevolutionaryWarheros call to arms.Each year,thebuglecall would dragme fromsleep in theearlymorninghours.I woke to theharshcry of the ridersthroughthe fieldbehind our Waylandhouse and to the rushed clackingofhorseshoeson thetarredroad outside:a small groupofmen in the costume of 1776 gallopingby as iftime had foldedover itselfin some quaint history-bookillustrationof Einsteinstheory. of its Pietyforme is Anglo-Protestant,Bostons cholericinterpretation Britishinheritance:Cromwells humorlessness,the starchedwhitecollars of merchantswhose portraitshang in the colonial wing of eighteenth-century the Boston Fine ArtsMuseum- and the prim,moralizinggaze theirgrandchildren'sgrandchildrenturned upon my voluble familywhen our excited conversationtroubledtheirpoliterestaurantmurmurings.To be pious was to be dutiful,whetherin dressor at prayer,at cocktailpartiesor school functions. Pietymeant proper conduct,formratherthan substance,the icy sang-froid of decorum. I favoredirreverencebecause it allowed me a small rebellion against this incurious citizenry,as parsimonious of gestureas theywere of speech. For a people who valued social compliance above all else, gaudiness was godlessness, brashness an unpardonable sin. Talking with your hands was showy,vulgar,gauche. It was what myfathercalled, in the loud drawlhe designatedas parody,"taaaacky,"theveryworditselftoo tackyforBostonians to utter. This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE GEORGIA REVIEW 274 When I watched my fatherspeak to my classmates parentson those fewoccasions when school functionsbroughtus all together,I read in their thecheckedbutpalpable hostilitythisconstrictedsocial world slightstiffening exhibitstowardthe unreserved.My fathers conversationalbrio distinguished him as unerringlyas ifhe were wearingJosephscoat. To New England eyes, he must have seemed honky-tonkas a neon sign blaringits advertisement forBudweiser,a loud macaw,a blotchof scarletin the midstof theirgraceful monochrome of silverybirches,white-paintedchurches,and wrought-iron weathervanes tempereddustyblack. Growingup, I detestedthisobtrusiveness.Now,livingsome threethousand miles away fromBostons Back Bay,I realize thatmyfathersexpansive gesturingand mercurialspeech,like his cockydisregardforconvention,were inheritedfromhis easternEuropean predecessors,themselvesviewedaskance bytheRussians,Germans,and Poles theylivedalongside.Strongemotionhoverslikestaticelectricity overhis head. Butso, too,does intellectualinquisitiveness,a respectforbrilliance- whetherin thefieldofautomobilemechanicsor theoreticalphysics- and a refusalto assume thatestablishedcustomis inherentlyvirtuous.My father'simperviousnessto the glamour of the politic and his lack of obeisance to institutionalauthorityconstitutea principlepure as faith.Reverenceforinnovation,curiosityuntrammeledby the pietiespaid to long-establishedtheory,and pleasurein scholarlyepiphanythatshattersintellectual traditionwithouta seconds regretdefinehis attitudetowardwork,as theworkofJewishscientistsmoregenerally.Dad taughtus thatthe theytypify onlywayto arriveat new ideas is to be a maverick.Buthis intellectualirreverence is less theproductof"thescientificmethod"thanofa Jewishtraditionhe shelvedand largely"forgot," or rather, translatedintoan ostensiblynonpartisan for and Rilke as did manyothersecularJewswho find Freud, Kafka, affinity themselveslivingin uncongenialsocial climates.Framed withinthe wake of the World War II historythatperpetuallycautionedwhereit did not silence, thisbrashnessis not unconscious enthusiasmbut defiance- a willfulrefusal to prostratethe selfbeforethe unsympathetic gaze of the intolerant. II. ApocalypticTime As a Rorschachtest,thecouplingof"Jews"with"modernity" is hardlyambiguous. Out oftheinkblot,one picturehabituallyresolves:the Shoah, the second of its century'sgenocides. Two decades afterWorld War II, the Holocaust became the pivotpoint upon whichJewishintellectuallifeturned.It remains This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 275 today,more than a halfcenturylater,the hingefromwhich our sense of ourselves depends. Its wake of loss and erasureparadoxicallysolders American Jewstogetheras a religiousand culturalcommunity.But the Holocaust has become theblack hole ofour history,swallowingthetime-spacewithinwhich it unfolds.Everynarrativewe produce todaymustbend and twistto accommodate thiscentralforce.If in ancienttimeswe were treatedto miraclesand monarchs(King David, the burningbush,the plagues in Egypt,Josephspropheticdreams),the twentiethcenturybringsonlyash, quiet as snowfall. In the past we had heroes,we had warriors,we had lovers- Solomon, the Song of Songs,the liltof the lute and the backwardglance of the maiden. Rebecca,Deborah, JudahMaccabee. I was raisedwithoutthesestories.Instead, likemanyofmysecular contemporaries,I have come to know Jewishnessas a an ethnic"knowledge"ironicallyechoingGermany'syellow badge ofsuffering, star.Like it or not,myiconographyis the victims,informedby photographs ofpeople in theWarsawghettoand in thedeathcamps,throughwhose darkly intelligenteyes we see a prescientknowledgeof theirown erasure.In some sense the memorialswe have constructedto the dead merelystrengthenthe pull thiscentralsadness exertsupon us. Each visitto a museum,designed to honor our ancestors,remindsus as well of the inescapabilityof our fateas outsiders. Such witnessing,in those ofus temporallydistantenough to be immune fromfear,is an upwellingofJobspride.LikeWilliamFaulkners Anse Bundren, thepatriarchofAs I Lay Dying>we seem proudofbeingchosen forspecial misoftheplaguedunfortuery.Pale eyesgluedopen in the"pleasedastonishment" man"- that nate,Bundrenrepeatsa mantra- "ifeverwas such a misfortunate could be our own. Faulkner'shumorrevealsthe particularpatterningof race conflictas it takes shape in the AmericanSouth. The writercensuresthe way bothblacksand whitesaccept tragedyas theirportion:dumblyunreflective as oxen saddled to a plow,theybend theirshouldersin assentto theirtwinFates. Bundrenis a comical figurewhose complacencyin thefaceofhis family'sendless calamitiesis vilifiedbyFaulkner,buthis smugnessfindsan uncomfortable parallelwithour own readinessto school ourselvesto perpetualtrauma. Habituatedas we are to understandingthe modernperiod as allegorical of Jewishsuffering, we seem to thinkthatwritingabout Jewishachievement is blasphemous. Images of what Elaine Scarrycalls "the body in pain" have crowded out alternaterepresentationsso fullythat,come time to writethis essayupon relationshipsbetweenJewsas victimsofwar and Jewsas engineers This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE GEORGIA REVIEW 2j6 of wars most devastatingtechnologyto date, I initiallyfound myselfhard pressed to scratchout more than a fewsolitaryparagraphs.The unfortunate side effectof Paul Célans brilliant,jetlikepoetryis to absorb intoitsdarkness the happierghostsof the twentiethcenturyWe rememberthebitterironyof his "Todesfuge":"he whistleshis Jewsinto rows has them shovel a gravein the ground/ he commands us play up forthe dance."But all the others- the painters,themusicians,thephilosophers,thedoctors,theengineers,thesocial leftwithoutburial. scientists,the physicists-are forgotten, III. Relativities and Escape artistsinventedtheatom bomb. Nazis destroyedEuropean Jewry, then the remnantsof European Jewrybecame destroyersof worlds. Here is AlbertEinstein,with his teasingsmile and Charlie Chaplin eyes,caughtby the camera: the Houdini of nuclearphysics.Brightlightsand fearsomeacts, the magiciansofWorldWar II, the scientistsof the ManhattanProject,strike a pose in Los Alamos. Thereis Hungarian-bornEdward Teller,who fledGermany,at once irascible and charming.Emilio Segrè,with his face inclined towardearthand shadowedin his retiringway,a refugeefromItaly.The young Otto Robert Frisch,who got out of Denmark just as the Germans invaded. WolfgangPauli, who workedwithNiels Bohr in his Copenhagen lab and left therebetweenthe wars. Alongsidethemare rangedthe AmericansJ.Robert Oppenheimerand RichardFeynman,thefirstlean as a pencil,theothera fineboned Puck whose sprightly energyis as sweetlynaughtyas thatShakespearean provocateurs. Dead men save fortheirflightout of Europe,theseoutcast performersin New Mexico orchestratedwhatwould be the century'sbiggest technologicalspectacle,to daze and dazzle a darkenedworld. The Holocaust and Hiroshimaare twinicons oftheapocalypticviolence thatinauguratesthe modern age. At the centerof both- like it or not- are Jews.If theywere halfof the estimatedtwelvemillionconsignedto death in Europe, Jewsconstitutedan even largerpercentageof the scientistswhose in New Mexico would transform efforts two Japanesecities,likewise,intoash. Wartimechronicling,likeHolocaust memorializing,is frequently paintedas a seriesoftwo-dimensionalposterboards to victoryand defeat.In one, tragedy: the"blackmilk"ofCélans "Deathfugue."In theother,courage:theAlliedeffort to win theweapons race againsttheNazis. Insulatedfromeach otherand from us,thesesimulacraofferan appropriately dignifiedversionofWorldWarII his- This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 277 action and heightened toryas epic, largerthanlife,a theaterof extraordinary emotion. these,and we lose themonumentalgrandeurthatretrospectively Jettison lendscoherenceto violence.Butwe obtaina qualityofattentionthatrestoresto modern Jewishexperienceitsrichnessand detail.At a minimum,theknowledge thattherelativesofthevictimsofthegas chamberswereinstrumentalin the race to develop the most potentweapons on earthshould give us pause. Juxtaposea photographof the physicistswho workedin Los Alamos with a picturetaken throughthe barbed wire mesh of Auschwitz.In the memorial photograph,breathingstickfiguresstareback at you. Too emaciatedto stand up straight,theystillpose forthe camera. Theirblack eyes smolder,guttered firesthatwill flameup again at the slightestprovocationof the air. Turn to the equally famous image of AlbertEinstein,and the accomplishmentsas well as tragediesof Jewishlives in the twentiethcenturycome intofocus.Einstein,his Mona Lisa smile at odds withthe sad darkeyes,large and lustrousand fringedwithlashes heavyas half-drawncurtains.And then thereis the sidelong smile itself,the veryicon of Jewishexperience,withits marvelousshades offeeling,bittersweet and rueful,liltingas theminor-keyed clarinet melodies of klezmer music- a littlemelancholy,a littlemocking, epigrammatic,knowing.A smile thatis ironic and romanticand pragmatic, quizzical withoutbemusement,nostalgicfora childhoodparadiseitrecognizes it neverenjoyed,slightlysuperiorbut hesitant(hoveringat the cornersof the mouthlike a watcherat the edges of a party);a flirtatioussmile thatmutates fromseductionto sadness in an instant;a glancingsmilewiththehead angled a quarterturnaway fromyou yet stillengages you steadfastlyand squarely withthe j accuse thatneitherJewsnor non-Jewswould evermistakeformere abstractedness. The time has come to returnthis sidelong look with an answering glance, forgoingthe satisfactionsof bereavementin order to examine more complicated solutions to the untenable choices historyoffers.Einstein,we know,refusedto become involvedin thewartimescience thatwould translate his famoustheoryinto its most destructivepractice.But many otherJewish in theworktheyoungFeynmansaw as necessary, physicistswereinstrumental what he with his the "fright"of called, given penchant forunderstatement, AtNorway'sNorskHydroplant,Nazi engineersoversaw Germany'smilitarism. the stepped-upproductionof heavywater- waterlaced withdeuterium,the This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 278 THE GEORGIA REVIEW hydrogenisotope whose denser molecular structurereleases neutronsthat moderateand controlthereactionsthatsplituraniumatoms.Learningofthis effort froma Dutch colleaguewho had been expelledfromtheKaiserWilhelm Einsteinwrotea letterofwarningto Roosevelt.The presidentdid not Institute, immediatelypay attentionto thisresident"alien"ofwhomthefbi pronounced in the early1940s,"This officewould not recommendthe employmentof Dr. Einstein,on mattersof a secretnature,withouta verycarefulinvestigation, as it seems unlikelythata man ofhis backgroundcould, in such a shorttime, become a loyal Americancitizen." In the end, many scientists"ofhis background"- socialistsand Jewswereinvitedto collaborateupon theNew Mexico-based bomb projectadministratedby J.Robert Oppenheimer- himselfblacklistedafterthe war. In an ironywe would do well to acknowledge,it was the refugeefromHungary, Edward Teller,who laterspoke most vociferouslyagainstthisyoungAmerican. Oppenheimergave twentyhoursofeach day and some thirtypounds on an alreadytoo-slenderframeto the project.Still,in 1954,he was essentially "tried"fordisloyalty, his securityclearancespermanentlyrevoked,his legacy ineradicablyblackened.His wifeKittyhad once been marriedto JosephDallet, a memberof the CommunistPartywho had been killed in 1937while fight- if ing fortheRepublicanside duringtheSpanish Civil War.This "affiliation" such it was, forwhen does your partnersformerspouse become your own relative?-was sufficient to scapegoat Oppenheimer. In the earlyforties,however,the tensionsbetweenthe impoliticJewish refugeeand theurbanescion ofa wealthyJewishAmericanfamilywereshoved aside. The escaped scientistswho occupied side-by-sideofficesat Los Alamos had been spat at and despised by Europe. Above deep Atlanticseas, fromthe decks oftheocean liners,theywatchedhome recedebeyondthehorizon.But notbeyondmemory.Reviledbythecountriesthatwould foreverremaintheir nativelands,is itanywondertheychose an affiliation thatmade morerespectfuluse of theirintellectualgifts? In New Mexico theysubstitutedcooperationand whatFeynmancondescendinglylabeled "engineering"forthe pure science thathad givento their livesitsrareand sustaininggrace.Like otherbrilliantpeople fortunate enough to findoutletsforself-expression in theirwork,thesephysicistspossessed the abilityto become so whollyabsorbed in concentrationthatthe separateanintoa singleclearnote.Such intellectual tiphoniesofselfresolvedmomentarily joy theymusthave sacrificedfora timeat Los Alamos: shelvingthequestions This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 279 and musingsthatsurfacedat odd momentsoftheday to remindthemoftheir constructa bomb. But for real interests,so thattheycould, committee-like, I suspectthata certaindegreeof camaraderie- the the refugees,particularly, fellowshiptheyhad once enjoyedin theirown European laboratoriesuntilit became unalterablycompromisedin the early1930s- compensated forthe temporarycessationof theirlargerintellectualconcerns.Much scholarlycollaborationis an uneasymix ofpeople in suspensionratherthansolution.The scientistsat Los Alamos- withtheirinsidejokes and theirSundaywalksin the and theirweekendparcanyons,theirsummer-campdormitoryarrangements ties werefiercely competitiveas onlytheintellectually self-possessedcan be, buttheywerea close-knitgroup,unitedin theircommon aim,theirrespectfor one another'swork,and even,paradoxically,in theirmaverickiconoclasm. Those ofus born decades afterWorldWar II have been raisedin thelong shadow ofnuclearfallout.We are intimatewithapocalypse.We knowitsimply as unpleasantfact,a slow toxicity:radiationdepositedin our bones fromyearly X-rays,the painstakingaccretion of mercuryin our blood, the thickening and blurringof our atmospherewithcarcinogenicfuelemissions so thatwe no longersee the horizon of clear days. Of course the scientistsgatheredin Los Alamos duringwartimewould have preferredpursuingtheirown work: questionsabout theformationofthestars,theas yetunnamed forcesfarmore potentthan gravitythatseemed to be keepingwhole constellationsfromcollapsing,the originof the universeitself.These large,ennoblingproblemshad occupied thembeforethepettybutvirulentspiteofhumanconflictsredirected theircollectiveintelligencestowardtheserviceofweaponry.For them,apocalypsewas imminent. The silence fromtheirfamiliesoverseas would have sounded loud as the hiss of a blank tape. Worryabout theirwelfarewould have clouded the scientists'focus and destroyedtheirconcentration,so that theymust have been gratefulto be occupied. Late in thewar,reportsofbarracksconstructed withthe sole object of dispatchingthose theyhoused to oblivionhad begun to circulatein the classifiedcirclesto whichmanyofthe scientistswereprivy. On theweekends,theyhikedup therockfacesofthemesas surroundingtheir temporaryquartersand steadiedtheirpalms againstthesun-warmedcontours of stone.Breathinghard in the thinair,did theysee the darkmiragesof their familieswaveron the horizon? At a minimum,theymusthave feltthe adrenalinesurgeof satisfaction when theymanipulateda power immeasurablymore concentratedthan the This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 28o THE GEORGIA REVIEW chemicalsmade byGermancompaniesand ventedthrough"showerheads"to suffocatethe historyprofessordown the street,the neighborhoodbullywho had tormenteda son,theclarinetplayernextdoor whose eternalpracticingwas ceased. Later,surveyingphotographsof audible throughthewallswhentraffic the lunar rubbleof Hiroshimaand Nagasaki (emptyas the abandoned death camps in Europe thatlikewisedenied the bereavedthe consolationof gravestones),did some of themturntheirbacks on the New Mexico skies to face Europe again and whisper- knowingtheburdentheyleftin the door frames of thebombed-outhouses- Thisisfinishedinyourname7. ofworlds."The eulogyJ.RobertOppen"Now we havebecome destroyers heimer pronounced afterthe bomb detonated has become proverbialfor ofOppenheimers first-person Americanglobaldominance.Buttheaffiliations extend across the seas: to to plural Italy, Germany,to Hungary,and to France, binding this group of refugeesin Los Alamos to theirseparategeographies of home. And forthe directorof the ManhattanProject,therewas thatother familiaras an irregular kinship,a tugofrecognitionslightand uncomfortably beat oftheheart,whichgaveto his gravepronouncementa morepointededge. What more appropriatepower forOppenheimer- cosmopolitan,scholarly, open minded- to call up as epitaphforthe Jewsof Europe than the spiritof Shiva?Physicalprincipleratherthanvengefuldeity,theHindu goddessappeals equallyto thetenetsofscience and belief.Shiva is entropy.Cosmic assessorof destructiveforces,she judges the capacityof systemsto toleratechaos- and so providedOppenheimera way to negotiatebetweenphysicsand faith.Too worldlyto be wholeheartedlyreligious,too wealthyto committo physicswith the single-mindedabsorptionof the refugeesand self-madeAmericanmen he managed,he foundin Shiva,howeverattenuated,theansweringretributive forceof his heart. IV. A Reverence forSkepticism Skepticismratherthanblind compliancewithestablishedlearningcharacterizes the rabbinic students disposition and the scientistsethos alike. Study requiresdisciplineand labor. But what most sharpensits edge, as rabbi and physician Moses Maimonides counsels in the Guide for the Perplexed he penned a millenniumago, is independence:thethinkermustpossess "a mind ofhis own."In eleventh-century Rabbi Shlomo ben Isaacs foundationalcommentarieson the Torah and Talmud, such criticalinquiry oftenverges on This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN l8l blasphemy.For both medievalthinkers,thepluralisticrationalismofthemost sophisticatedlearningin rabbinicschools dazzles like thefacetsofa cut gemstone. "There are seventyfaces to the Torah,"rabbinicsayingasserts,which condones as manyreadingsoftheBible.The assumptionhere- thateach per- echoes son possesses the responsibilityto tease out his own interpretation Feynman,as it echoes myfather,as it echoes Einsteinsown satisfactionwith scientificstudy. Jewishscientistsare quick to distancethemselvesfromreligiousorthodoxy,but the intellectualqualities Talmudic scholars value are their own. Despite his tendencyto distinguishthe work of science fromthe studyof religion,Einsteinwas aware thaton one levelhe was translatinghis predecessors' desireto decipherthe laws of God intothe laws of physics."To be sure," he acknowledged in The Worldas I See It, "it is not the fruitsof scientific researchthatelevatea man and enrichhis nature,but the urgeto understand, the intellectualwork,creativeor receptive.It would surelybe absurd to judge Itis notscientific thevalue oftheTalmud,forinstance,byitsintellectualfruits." that is but scientific that valuable, compels. Ifthe fieldof application principle studyhas altered,this primarymotive "the urge to understand" remains unchangedacross the long centuries. Both Einsteinand themedievalrabbiniccommentariesvalue workmore thanitsoutcome."Measuredobjectively," thephysicistasserts,"whata man can But the strivwrestfromTruthby passionate strivingis utterlyinfinitesimal. us from the bonds frees of the self." Maimonides ing Similarly, suggeststhatif you "do not persuade yourselfto believethatthereis a proofforthingswhich cannot be demonstrated,or . . . tryat once to rejectand positivelyto deny an assertionthe opposite of which has neverbeen proved . . . thenyou have attainedthe highestdegree of human perfection."Because intellectualwork itreleasesus momentarily fromtheconstraints requiresintenseconcentration, ofego,thesmall resentments, and annoyancesthat jealousies, dissatisfactions, becloud perception.The sacred is tied as closely to human effort, properly focused,as itis to divinityitself,that"windfrom disciplinedand appropriately God sweepingover thewater,"as Genesis frameswhat is externalboth to the materialworldand to human consciousness. The need to findin science a kind of human workthatis disinterested (immune,thatis, to the distractionsof illustrationand example) is in essence the desirethatmotivatesthe religiousto envisionan alternativeto the imperfectworld,one remotebut nonethelessresonatingin sympathywithour finer This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 282 THE GEORGIA REVIEW feelings.Metaphysicalunderstandingshareswithscience an interestin principles. Einsteinslongingto achieve momentsof scientificclarityechoes the yearningof religious scholars to arriveat insightinto the divine. And the physicistslanguageofprayeris thinking:themuscularcontractionsthatpush blood throughour arteriesand oxygenatethereceptivetissuesofthebrain,the forestof dendritesand gangliastirringto our everythought,signalsjumping fromneuron to neuron in a patternswiftand untraceableas blinkingfirefly lightsin thenightsky.The fernliketendrilsofcapillariesthatflushscarletwith each pulse of our hearts,the traceryof branchesin our airwaysthatexpand and contractwithour everybreath- theseare the conduitsand blood vessels throughwhich we worktowardan understandingof the thingsoutside ourselves. Respirationand inspiration,physicsand physic:the medieval clerics knew as well as we thatmetaphysicsis a miracleof breathand pulse, of body and mind workingin concertto tracepathwaysfromthe patternedmillions of nervesand neuronsinside to the patternedmillionsof starsoutside.To be a doctor is to be a rabbi,to see how physiologypermitsphilosophyand how philosophy,in itsturn,shadows God. The medical analogies Maimonides exploits throughouthis religious writingsreflectthisgenealogy;the essaysof certaincontemporaryphysicians who are as facilewithphilologyas physiologymaintainthistradition.Perhaps thedesireofpeople across theworldto possess a piece ofEinsteinsbrainafter his death need not be cynicallydismissedas thevoyeurismofthecircussideshow Instead,it mightbe seen as a formofworshipthatreflectsan appreciationforthekineticand chemicalleaps across synapses- leaps not so different fromthose of faith. Like muscle tissue,which atrophiesor increases in girthaccording to our own determinedeffort, thinkingquickensor slackensin concertwiththe intellectualdemands we make ofourselves.We thinkin orderto approachan understandingofthedeepestspiritualquestions,Maimonides argued.Butthe powerto speculateis notsimplyconferredupon theheads oftheappropriately pious. Reverence- thatqualitythe PuritancultureofNew Englandassociates with piety,with decorum, with an unquestioned obedience to duty- is for Jewsconnected with desire and never the effortto suffocateit; with intellectual skepticismratherthan catechism;and withan independenceof mind thatalways,always supersedes collectivewisdom. A millenniumafterMaimonides,Einsteinpracticeda similarintellectualfaith.He did notgiveup this This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 283 faithever: not when his cautionsto the U.S. governmentabout German war ofweapons ofmass destruction,not when efforts resultedin theproliferation the bomb over Hiroshima stilledthe citybeforethe nervesignals registering its brilliantravagingcould make theirway to the brains of the watchers,not even when he knew the busy firingsinside his own brain were withinhours I am. IfEinsteininauguratedthe ofceasing. Cogitoergosum. I thinktherefore modern scientificage, he was stilla child of Descartes. The day he died of a stomachaneurysm,he lay in his hospitalbed writingout equations. Jewsare oftenseen as parochial,an ironyof epic proportionsgiventhe All overtheworld,different Jewish cosmopolitanismofJewishintellectualism. culturestake the phrase intellectualworkseriously.Surprisingly, theireducationhas changedverylittleoverthecenturies.Iftheoriginsofscholarlyinquiry seem insularin the sense thattheyderivefromreligiousinterpretation, take a closer look. The secular among us may ridiculethe Talmudic thinkeras the originalbespectaclednerd,butthestudygroupswithinwhichstudentscluster spur the kind of bravura academic performancethatcharacterizesthe best thinkers. V. Art,Science, and theSublime I havebeen schooledto understandtragedyas theapex As a literature professor, of achievement.In concertwiththe openinglines of Tolstoys Anna Karenina ("Happy familiesare all alike; everyunhappy familyis unhappy in its own Like Chagall'sgloriouspalette,howway"),literarycriticsbalk at affirmation. ever,writingsbyEinsteinand Feynmancommunicatehappinessfarmoreoften than defeat.And whyshouldn'tthisfugitive, alchemicalpresenceoccupy our If lives? loss is how much morenuanced themomenimaginative complicated, in thenightsky?Whilewe linger taryluminescenceofjoy,a pizzicatooffireflies sorrow in and the of verse, upon prose vitality midcenturypaintersowes much to thesensibilitiesoftheirmodernistprecursorswhose energyreanimatedthe plastic arts.Think of the kineticdazzle of JacksonPollock'scanvases,where paintpulseswiththeuncontainableenergyofsome unstableelement.Matisse's warmlylit abstractionsof the Frenchlandscape. Picasso's canon- imperial, muscular,assertive,and, save forGuernica, a refusalof the darknessof war. And then thereare the Jewishpainters:the proto-modernlightexperiments of Camille Pissarroand, later,Max Liebermann.Mark Rothko'sshimmering rectangles,luminousas the surfaceof water.The figuresin Chagall'scanvases This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 284 THE GEORGIA REVIEW thathovermidwaybetweenearthand sky,mirroringthesudden elusive,inexplicableriseofthespirits. The paintingsof this Russian immigrantharborghostsless oftenthan Canvases glow theybeckontowardthesprightly dancingofcircusperformers. as boxes. Color is so vibrant here it seems the bright crayon point of painting:theblue oftheazure,lemon-yellowdaffodils,greenspiquantas unfurling leaves,reds thecheerfulcrimsonofnewlyoxygenatedblood. Despite thedisparagementof some native-bornFrench,Moische Segal, survivorof pogrom and Holocaust and newlynaturalizedcitizen,adorned the ceilingof the new ParisOpera withtheeffulgent hues ofTintoretto. Color- tenderas spring,high spiritedas childrenat Purim,glamorousas Mardi Gras or thekineticstreakof red and whitetraffic lighton time-exposedphotographicfilms- speaks in the accentsofjoy in almostall of Chagall'swork. Of course,thepainterwas as intimatewithloss as withtheTorah stories he translatedto paint.But sorrowhe contained,forthemostpart.Melancholy remainedpartofthepast,visiblein thefaintsmile- a not-so-distant mirrorto Einsteinsown- thatplayedacrosshis fathers lips."Everything aboutmyfather seemed enigma and sadness to me,"Chagall writesin Ma Vie, his autobiography."Alwaystired,careworn,only his eyes had a luster,of grey-blue.... He liftedheavy barrels [of herring],and my heartached to see him hoist those loads, his frozenhands fumbling.. . . Only his face occasionally betrayeda faintsmile. What a smile! Where did it come from?"Like Einstein,whose unfathomablesmile simultaneouslyopens to and answersforsadness, Chagall recognizesmelancholyonlyto confineitto thehorizonline ofhis Russian homeland. The refugeeswisdom:we can neverrecover,unlesswe finallystoplistening. And so, sadness shimmersfaintly in theblue tonesthatoutlinetheartists homes and cathedral bells. But the presentis fullof work, peasant faraway the satisfying soulfulworkofpainting,wherehappyscenes are squarelyforegrounded.Light,color,movement- thereis the EiffelTower,herethe chatter of talkand the clinkofglasswarealong Pariss tree-linedavenues.Enraptured loversfloatabove thegroundlikebrightballoons escaping,fiddlerschase away deathplayingon highrooftopsabove townstreets,thepetalsofflowersglisten like stars. If we were to expressfeelingin the language of physics,thenhappiness would be as kineticas the artistssoftlywaveringcanvases. Sorrowis absolute This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 285 zero,the absence of energy,when even the hummingbirdvibrationof atoms quivers into stillness.Gladness trembleslike the dappled lightin Chagalls circuspictures,whichdefygriefas theydefyNewtonslaws. Dancers pirouette in air whilea clown clasps a donkeyroundthewaist.Human and animal alike glow with the green-yellowtones of spring,spangled with color like water sparkingagainstsunlight. The painterunderstandscolor the way a physicistinterpretsthe spectrum.Not, thatis, as pigmentor hue, but as energy,the dynamicfreightof each painted storysmood and argument.Stand in frontof one of Chagalls stained-glasswindowsand you cannotfailto understandthisforce."Justmaterialsand light,"he explained,and "somethingmysticalpasses throughthewindow."BeautydroveEinsteintoo. Nor was thisaestheticimpulseidiosyncratic: mathematicianswilltellyou thatthefinestexpressionspossess theirown spare grace.The mostelegantalgebraicsolutionis thesimplest.Shornofunnecessary parts,the letters,symbols,and numbersvibratewiththe suppressedenergy of Kandinskys neon canvases. Strippinga mathematicalphrase to its fewest In itscogency,itsharmoniouscontainment elementsis profoundlysatisfying. of affiliationand design, it gesturestowardwhat Einstein and other physicistsknewwas an infinitely interconnecteduniverse.WilliamCarlos Williams echoes thisidea in "The Rose" when he imaginesa flowerpetal and theworld itscurvededge defines."Fromthepetals edge a line starts/thatbeing ofsteel / infinitely / rigidpenetrates/ the Milky Way / withoutconfine,infinitely tact."Craftedin language as lucentas the meetingof rose and atmosphereit ofthe flower/unbruised" perceives,thepoets understandingofthe "fragility as it "penetratesspace" is also Einsteinsbeliefin the comprehensionofreality as spelled out in the unifyingtermsof generalrelativity. "If uniformmotion " was relative,"the physicistassumed, then all motion should be." This aes- an unhappinesswith special theticdissatisfaction because it was relativity - moved Einsteinto formulatewhat the editorsof his "ugly" writingsin The Human Side called withsympatheticunderstanding"gravitationalequations of transcendentbeauty." Chagalls calculus expressedart as the sum of materialsand light.Einsteins greatestinsightabout the relationshipof mass and energyoriginated froma similarfocuson thenaturalworlds basic elementsand a corresponding faithin this worlds unity.The earthsbalance is everywherereflected:in the tensilestrengthof a singlehair,in theperfectproportionsofan Ionic column whose flower-stem slendernessholds thousandsofpounds ofmarblealoft.The This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 286 THE GEORGIA REVIEW physicist'smostfamousequation expresseswithausterebeautythe"profound that compose our world. Einsteins equation is a matheinterrelationships" maticalmetaphorforan elegantuniverseregulatedfrominterstellar space to single-celledorganismby the same physicalprinciples.Marvelouslyefficient on the page, it gesturestowardforcesof such magnitudemost of us cannot conceptualizethem withoutthe aid of analogy."E," "m,""c,"the superscript "2": thealphabeta childlearns.E=mc2,symbolsconnectingimmensitieswith minutiae.To contemplatethisequation is to see the microcosmin the world and the universecontained in a grainof sand. Travelfarenough away from theblue-greenradianceoftheearth,and thissmall roundbeautybecomes the colored irisofa human eye.Witnessthedarkenergythatmakesthestarsrush awayfromone anotherin balance withthecohesionthatkeepsa drop ofwater compressed,a perfectglobe. awe fortheworld The writingsof scientistsreflectthe same affectionate visiblein Chagalls buoyantcanvases. We are quick to understandtwentiethcenturyphysicsas our eras heartofdarkness,but thisis to mistakeitscrudest physicalexpression,thetechnologicalpowerunleashedduringwarfare,forits withatomic supremetranslationon earth.The scientistswhose investigations fissionled to the engineeringof the worlds most powerfulweapon spentthe majorityof theirlives marvelingat a universewhose incomparablebeauty was expressedin forcesheld in harmony,supple and strongand lovelyas the sinewfromankleto knee.Reducingthelaws ofnatureto theirmostelemental relationshipswas a kind of distillationprocess,renderingobservationfreeof blur,of noise, of distraction.Einstein'selegantequations wereelixir:when he transcribednaturallaws into mathematicalsymbols,he was, like the Greek philosophers,siftingout impurities.Physicswas forhim a way of listening intentlyto themusic ofthe spheres.The ancientsdescribedthe starryskiesas suspended in ether,an atmosphereso rarifiedtheworldcould not breatheit. Einstein,likewise,saw a unitythatapproachedperfection.Physicswas to the cosmos what the listeningear was to music: the means by whichwe connect withwhatsurroundsus in a whollyunmediatedway,directas touch,sufficient in itself,an insighttoo fineto be carriedby language. Its equations link art and nature.Concordance,harmony,balance: thisis whatEinsteinsees in the universeand whata cellisthears in Bach'sfugues.We listen,summingup the balanced frequenciesof each note intopurityin our ear. Like the cellos spare loveliness,Einstein'sequation possesses infiniteexpressivepower. This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 287 The waythingsworkis itselfbeautiful.Understandingtheintricatedesign thatholds forcesbalanced in tensionis an aestheticand an ethic,providing artisticand scientific observationswiththeirprofounddepth.Einsteingestures towardthis sense of connectionin writingof a winterstorm:"The sea has a look of indescribablegrandeur,especiallywhen the sun fallson it. One feels as ifone is dissolvedand mergedintoNature.Even morethanusual, one feels the insignificanceof the individual,and it makes one happy."How many of us have feltthe sharpnessof our own losses gentledby looking out over the expanse ofwateror the dome of sky,the endlesswaves ofwaterand wind and cloud acrosshorizonsthatwillremainlong afterour own heartshave stopped? The grandeurthatEinsteinfeltat thewaters edge is the same sublimeinsight we know as Genesis: "The earthbeingunformedand void,withdarknessover the surfaceof the deep and a wind fromGod sweepingover the water."Light generatesitselffromchaos. Justso, the recognitionof a being dissolved and releasedoftheweightof significancein a greaterpowerbringsease and lightbut rather ness. Creationdoes not issue frombitternessor a sense ofaffliction, forcesat work fromthesouls gratefulunderstandingofthepoised,interrelated in theworlds design. VI. BeyondDescartes:Doubt as Invention The brilliantly energeticskepticismthatcharacterizestheworkofJewishphysicistsis as much thehallmarkofJewishcultureas is thepietyofmelancholy.To doubt is not to falteror despair.It is to createpossibility,to see the world in a different way,to sweep away establishedwisdom withouta second thought or second look when thatlegacydoes not adequatelyexplainexperience.The blind reverenceto memoryand the stubbornhold on thepast long attributed to Jewsare merelybyproductsof this unhesitatingenergy,an after-the-fact apology compensatingfora defiancethatdrivesinnovation.In a postwarlectureon "The Value of Science" deliveredat the 1955meetingof the National AcademyofSciences,Feynmanprivilegesskepticismwhenhe definesscientific - some knowledgeas a collectionofstatementsof"varyingdegreesofcertainty most unsure,some nearlysure,but none absolutelycertain."Incertitudecatalyzes exploration.The "freedomto doubt" is a liberty a privilegewrested "out of a struggleagainstauthorityin the earlydays of science."Permitus to thinkersdemanded. Allow us "to not be question,these seventeenth-century researcher sure,"the twentieth repeats. -century This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 288 THE GEORGIA REVIEW Asking questions, not supplyingready answers,makes good science. Here we come fullcircle,back to the traditionsof studyexplainedby Shlomo ben Isaac (Rashid) and Maimonides(Ramban), traditionssustainedbyTalmudic studyto thisday.In his second memoir,"What Do You Care What Other he heldwith PeopleThink?" Feynmanremembersa discussionabout electricity a group of rabbinicalstudentsin New York City.With his usual arrogance, the physicistadmits,he assumed his science would best theirreligiouslogic. But theyweretentimesquickerthanhe was. "Assoon as theysaw I could put themin a hole,theywenttwist,turn,twist- I cant rememberhow- and they werefree!I thoughtI had come up withan originalidea- phooey! It had been discussed in theTalmud forages!" Here is theJewas escape artist,theintellectual Houdini who wrigglesfreeofhis chainsand slipsout ofconfinement, the wartimerefugeewho eludes the Shoah withthe light-footedness a starvation diet allows. In the midstof gloom we hear the liltof klezmermusic,an alto clarinetkickingup itsheelslikea weddingdancer- a hintofmelancholyin the minorkey,but played at allegrotempo.And alwaysideas, ideas unstoppable as a nuclearreaction,intellectualfissionreleasedas marvelous,uncontainable energy. And thenthereis Feynmanhimself,an imp who recountshis safecrack" Ě"In ingand lock-pickingtrickswithuncontainableglee in SurelyYou'reJoking the ironcladsecurityof Los Alamos, Feynmanis a human dustdevil blowing away otherscientistsbeforehis anticslike tumbleweedsin fright: I wentbacktothefirst cabinetandclick! Itopened!. . . NowI filing couldwritea safecracker bookthatwouldbeateveryone... I opened safeswhosecontents were. . . morevaluablethanwhatanysafecracker had anywhere opened- exceptfora life,ofcourse thesafeswhich containedall thesecretsto theatomicbomb:theschedulesforthe oftheplutonium, thepurification howmuch production procedures, material is needed,howthebombworks, howtheneutrons aregenerwhat the the dimensions the entire information that ated, designis, wasknownat Los Alamos:thewholeschmeer Г At the heartof darknessresidesthissprite,exposingsecurityflawsand defyinggravitas,sidesteppingsermon,mockingseriousness,delightingin his own brilliancewitha childlikeopenness thatdeflatesanyclaim to destructiveselfimportance.To see the slightfigureof the physicistwatchinghis colleague blanch at a safe emptyexceptfora scrap of paper scrawledtriumphantly in This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 289 red crayonwiththewords"Feynmanwas here"is to witnessthatotherJewish s happiness tradition,an irrepressibleenergyflauntinggriefto finda trickster at the centerof gloom. Much scientificbrilliancewas volunteeredat Los Alamos in service of weapons thatremainthevanishingpoint forour own nightmares.But death, destruction,and the world laid waste need not be the end of the story.The same wartimerefugees- outsiderslikeEinstein,Pauli,and Segrè- have given theearthitslocationamongthestars,exploredgalaxiesat theouteredge ofthe universe,discoveredthe forcesthatkeep thevoid of space fromcollapsingin upon itself- else no earth,no sun, no stars,no universe.Why see the facesof Jewishpeople as thefallenleaves ofhistory, scuttlingthiswayand thataccording to an ill-intentionedGerman wind? At the veryperiod memorializedby whose endpoint is a historyas a dead loss, an era of unspeakable suffering mass vanishing,Jewsremadethe universe.The nadir of Jewishhistorymarks the greatestprofusionof scientificideas since Newton,and these physicists, were pushed malignlyto the edges and thenout of sightofEurope altogether, centralto itsflourishing. The omniscientgrandeurearliercenturiesgave to the angels,the scientistsbestowedon themselves- not as creators,butwiththehumilityofintelligentwatchers.Theycontemplatedthebeginningsoftimeand itsend,watched as starsexploded, imploded, and exploded again, theirmaterialscoming to momentaryrestin the iron of our blood and bones. Not passive,not waiting, notparalyzedbydespair,thepeople pushed to themarginsoftheirown townships traveledout to expand boundaries most of us could not even invent, much less understand.The destructiveenergythat found a language in the barked commands of midcenturywartimewas nothingto these scientists positivelychargedmasses,volatilewithideas, exuberantwiththemomentum of insightstheyknew were inescapable,unstoppable,transforming. I could not understandeven the simplestphysicsequation to save my but the cockyinsouciance toward"whatotherpeople will say" conforms life, closely to my familialexperience.I recognize in Feynmans inimitableselfpossessionan ebullienceakin to myfathers brashness,as wellas an impatience withthesocial ritualsoftheless curiouswho tookrefugein sitevisitsand committeemeetingswhile he wanted only to be in the lab, thinking.Intellectual tendentiousnessand a sublime lack of fearat jettisoningaccepted wisdom is my inheritance,too- albeit in a different academic environmentthan the This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 290 THE GEORGIA REVIEW researchmedicinethatis myfathers professionor thetheoreticalphysicsthat is theprovinceof so manyJewishscientists. So, writerand reader of literaturethat I am, I stumblethroughBrian Greenes Elegant Universe , hoping in mysnails pace to pick up a fewsurface about stringtheory,and edge my way throughthe tangled understandings thicketof TheFabricoftheCosmos, anticipatingthata fewsmallbursofinsight about our eleven-dimensionalworldwillstubbornlyclingto mysleeve.I know thatthisverydesire to learn is in my case a provocationinheritedas well as discovered,a culturalimpulseas pleasingand profoundas themuscularintelligencethatperformsitsown dailymiracleswhen we lifta cup to our lips,or draw a violin bow across a string,or,like myartistdaughterZoë, put pen to paper.I have neitherstudiedTalmudnor sat formorethantwohoursat a time listeningto rabbinicalsermons.Butitis fromthousandsofyearsofthesescholarlytraditionsthatmyown pleasure in learningin part originates.Effortless as the body's memory,and as poised, the giftof intellectualbrashnessopens to a kind of secular faith.The mathmaybe performedby supercomputersin windowlesslaboratories,but still,it is stargazingthatcatalyzessuch scientific inquiry.What could be more spiritualthanthis,thisunbalancinglooking-up at the dome of sky,yourhands raised slightlyto compensateforyourbodys tilting, yourhead thrownback thisopen-throatedbutunspeakableyearning, thiswillingnessto connect to what is beyond the selfthatends in rapturous Here,thepast is not a burden,nor a bitteracceptanceoftheworlds mystery? ness withoutbalm. Instead,itcurvestowardthefuture, just as, lookingup,we thinkbeyond our presentmomentilluminatedby starlightfromplaces that disappearedbeforeanyofus- nationafternation,people afterpeople began, slow as a flowers unfurling,to move fromthe crouch of fourfeetto practice the uprightstancethatmakes stargazingpossible. Whatmorecuriousgiftcould therebe thanthecapacitywe haveofbendso thata fewmomentsrecalled in the lightningflashesof memory time, ing obliteratethe darknessof difficult years.These refugeescientistsshow us that timeless cruelty ancient"problemsfromhell" translated againsthumanity's as into modern genocide- we also possess some understandingof relativity an interestbeyond our own footing.Intellectualwork can move us toward serenityas easilyas towardtragedy.What drivesinsightis not thepain ofloss but a transportingrecognitionthatis outside of the body altogether,outside of humanness,even- a floatingupward heedless of gravitythatconnectsus This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions ANNE GOLDMAN 29I withwhat the Greekscalled the etherand what we stilldo not know how to name. Science and artextendthemselvesas hopefullyas Chagalls lovers,connected by theirhands as theyleave the ground.And timeis the key.Perhaps this is what occupied those Jewishphysicistsin theirexplorationof the universe: a means to recapturea sense of time as marvel,stretchingbehind us and in frontof us like the seas upon which continentsfloat.In place of the Holocaust, engulfinglightand air,theylistenedfora wind over the darkness thatportendsmovement,a stirof atmospherethatgesturestowardpresence, a quickeningfromabsence. This conceptionis ancientand again modern,and no more miraculousthan the idea thatour own universe- anchoredwhere? and floatingupon what,ifnot more space?- will itselfgrowto fullnessto the edges of time,thencontractall timeback intoitself... a trilliontrillionmeasures slower,yes,than the memoryof human life- but sure as the rhythmic rise and fallof our own breathing. This content downloaded from 128.192.114.228 on Wed, 15 Oct 2014 10:37:20 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions