Hitler's Scientists
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First Sentence
"The texts in this collection are drawn from three ancient biographies of Alexander of Macedonia - Alexander 'the Great' - who died in Babylon in 323 BC at the age of just thirty-two having conquered half of the known world."
448 pages
~7h 28min to read
Description
For the first three decades of the twentieth century, Germany held the premier position for science throughout the world. German scientists were the most accomplished and honored in their fields, winning the lion's share of Nobel prizes. But in 1933 came Hitler. Jewish scientists were dismissed from their positions in laboratories and at universities, and the Nazi ideology began to dominate Germany's science communities. Some scientists enthusiastically collaborated with the Nazis; most merely acquiesced, arguing that science lies outside politics and morality. By the end of the Second World War, few German scientists remained untainted by a regime bent on genocide and racial conquest. - Jacket flap.
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