Activity Listings
- Article: "Oppenheimer Found Loyal, Clearance Denied", Chemical and Engineering News, June 14, 1954. [LP Biographical: Box 2.037, Folder 37.10]
- Letter from Beatrice Wulf, Executive Secretary, to David R. Goddard, Society of Growth and Development, University of Pennsylvania, RE: Informs that there is a possibility that Linda Pauling will accompany LP and AHP to the meeting, asks that a reservation be made for her. [Filed under LP Speeches: 1954s.12]
- Letter from LP to Dr. Sam Naiditch RE: LP lists job openings that might interest Naiditch, in response to Naiditch's query. [Letter from Naiditch June 14, 1954] [Filed under N: Correspondence 1954, Box #287.21]
- Letter from LP to Phillip L. Adams. [Letter from Phillip L. Adams to LP April 25, 1954 reply from LP to Adams June 14, 1954] [Filed A: Correspondence 1954, Box #12.20]
14 June 1954
Mr. Phillip L. Adams
26 rue d'Edimbourg
Paris 8
France
Dear Mr. Adams:
I have been interested to read your letter of 25 April, and I have thought about it several times, before deciding how to answer it.
I am glad that you are interested in the problem of the nature of life, in a broad sense. I have the feeling, from your letter, that you are interested in it now in too broad a sense, and that it would be wise for you to decide to begin by restricting your interest, and then later to broaden it. You have referred to almost everything in the world, in your letter. Of course, you state that total knowledge is impossible, and apparently recognize that you will have to pick a somewhat limited objective, and work toward it.
I have formed the opinion that you are really getting around to deciding that you should be a scholar and a teacher. If you do decide to become a teacher, then you will have the opportunity to devote your life to helping to answer your fundamental question, what is life?
I think that I would advise you to try to decide now what field you would prefer to specialize in - what field of knowledge you would like to learn thoroughly, and teach. This would, presumably, then be the field, bearing on the nature of life, that you first would study intensively.
Have you been interested in biology? With the scientific background that you have, perhaps you should plan to become a biologist. I think that the biologists are making great progress in the attack on the problem of the nature of life. Of course, during recent years chemists have been working on the same problems. There is a new field, that of molecular biology, that is now being developed, in considerable part through the work of chemists. I enclose a reprint of a paper of mine, on the hemoglobin molecule in health and disease, which will give you some idea about this field.
If you want a superficial knowledge of biological work in relation to the question of the nature of life, then I think that you can start out by reading articles in the issues of the Scientific American that have appeared during recent years. I do not think, however, that these rather
Mr. Adams
-2- 14/6/54
popular articles will do the job that you want done.
I am leaving Pasadena in two days, and I shall be gone for a month. After my return, I should be glad to write to you again, and answer any questions that may have arisen because of this letter. I cannot recommend a school or college to you at the present time - I need to have a better idea about your plans.
Sincerely yours,
Dictated by Linus Pauling
Signed in his absence:W
- Letter from LP to William K. Viertel RE: Reply to his letter of May 8, 1954. LP encloses copy of letter that he wrote to Prof. Farrington Daniels, president of the ACS at the time when Mme. Joliot-Curie's application for membership was denied, to express his views on the matter. [Viertel's letter May 8, 1954] [Filed under V: Correspondence 1954, Box #427.14]
- Letter from LP's Executive Secretary to Dr. Garnet T. Page, M. C. I. C., The Chemical Institute of Canada, RE: Informs that LP accepts the invitation to sit at the head table at the luncheon. [Filed under LP Speeches: 1954s. 11]
- Letter from Martin Kilpatrick, Illinois Institute of Technology to LP RE: Asking if LP would be able to talk with Danish researcher Flemming Woldbye during his tour of CA [Reply Beatrice Wulf June 17, 1954] [Filed under W: Correspondence 1954, Box #444.2]
- Letter from Mary D. Alexander, Production Editor, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences RE: Acknowledging the receipt of the article "Some Relations between DNA and RNA" by Alexander Rich and J. D. Watson. [Letter from LP May 7, 1954] [Filed under LP Science: (National Academy of Sciences, 1952-1954), Box #14.020, Folder 20.3]
- Letter from Mary D. Alexander, Production Editor, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences RE: Acknowledging the receipt of the article "The Agglutinating and Sensitizing Capacity of Antisera to Sheep Red Cells after Varying Degrees of Photo-Oxidation" by Alvert Tyler, M. Lorraine Fiset and Robin R. A. Coombs. [Letter from LP May 7, 1954] [Filed under LP Science: (National Academy of Sciences, 1952-1954), Box #14.020, Folder 20.3]
- Letter from T. S. Work to LP RE: Thanks LP for his letter of June 2, 1954 and will be in Pasadena 8-3 through August 5, 1954 [Letter from LP June 2, 1954; Reply from Beatrice Wulf June 22, 1954] [Filed under W: Correspondence 1954, Box #444.2]
- Newspaper Article: "Reed Commencement Speaker Notes Lack of Clear Thinking in Oppenheimer Case," The Oregonian, Portland, Oregon [LP Newspaper Clipping 1954n.6]
- Newspaper Clipping: "Reed Commencement Speaker Notes Lack of Clear Thinking in Oppenheimer Case", Portland Oregonian, June 14, 1954. Newspaper Clipping: "Scientist Raps Oppenheimer Ban", Publication Unknown, June 1954. [Filed under LP Biographical: Box 6.006, Folder 6.53]
|