Einstein on Peace |
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Page 151
... citizens . Life is in constant peril and normal activity impossible . The city fathers seek to remedy this dreadful state of affairs , but the citizens insist on their right to carry a knife . After years of futility the city council at ...
... citizens . Life is in constant peril and normal activity impossible . The city fathers seek to remedy this dreadful state of affairs , but the citizens insist on their right to carry a knife . After years of futility the city council at ...
Page 164
... citizens of America take an active part in the problem of disarmament . The United States . could be the most influential factor in international affairs today , provided its citizens really wanted it . ... Two days later , on February ...
... citizens of America take an active part in the problem of disarmament . The United States . could be the most influential factor in international affairs today , provided its citizens really wanted it . ... Two days later , on February ...
Page 618
... citizens . Justice Douglas makes his decisions as a jurist . I suppose that he holds the following position : The state can and must force its citizens ( i.e. , the people living within its boundaries ) to respect its laws , but the ...
... citizens . Justice Douglas makes his decisions as a jurist . I suppose that he holds the following position : The state can and must force its citizens ( i.e. , the people living within its boundaries ) to respect its laws , but the ...
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able accept achieve action aggression Albert Einstein American armaments atomic bomb atomic energy Atomic Scientists attitude become believe Berlin Bertrand Russell cause citizens civilization conference congress consider convinced countries create cultural danger decisions democratic destruction disarmament discussed economic effective efforts Einstein replied Einstein wrote establishment Europe European existence expressed fact Fascist feel force freedom French Geneva German goal hope human important individual institutions Intellectual Co-operation interest International League League of Nations letter living Lorentz mankind meeting ment military service moral Nazi Nazism Nobel opinion organization pacifist participate peace physicist political possible present President problem Professor proposal question realize refusal resistance responsibility Rolland Romain Rolland Roosevelt Russia scientific sent situation social society Soviet Union spirit statement stein suggested supranational Szilard ternational tion tional United Nations University uranium War Resisters weapons world government York