The award-winning movie Oppenheimer opened in Israeli theaters in the summer. It was good, and informative, but in many ways incomplete. One can access further details by reading Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin’s biography of the theoretical physicist [American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer] on which the movie was based, and the two volumes by Richards Rhodes, The Making of the Atomic Bomb and Dark Sun. The second book describes how the hydrogen bomb was built. Taken together, they number slightly less than 2,000 pages.

If one reads seriously, as I did, starting when the movie premiered, it takes several weeks to get through the material, overlapping with Parshat Vayera and the story of Sodom and Gomorrah – including the argument that Abraham had with the Deity to prevent the destruction of cities.

This is a thought-provoking exchange, not because of Abraham’s chutzpah but because the arguments he uses are the same as those used by Oppenheimer, Szilard, Fermi, Lawrence, Niels Bohr, and others to dissuade president Harry Truman from authorizing the use of atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki, five to six thousand years later.

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