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Hitler's Scientists : ウィキペディア英語版 | Hitler's Scientists
''Hitler's Scientists'' is a book by John Cornwell describing scientific life in Germany in the buildup to, during, and after World War II. Detailed is the discrimination and persecution of scientists' groups marginalized by Nazi Germany—such as the Jews, the failed development of a nuclear weapon, the development of rocket technology, and the human experiments performed during World War II. Hitler's Scientists ''Science, War and the Devil's Pact'' by John Cornwell == I. Hitler’s Scientific Inheritance ==
From chapter 1 to 6, through relationships with scientists who make weapons, Hitler realizes the power of science and technology in relation to dominance through war. Germany's dominance in science field helped Nazi party to have advantages in having weapons and machines. In the 1900s, Germans had early advances in liquefaction of gases, production of electrical power, and electrochemistry. Especially, German chemist, Fritz Haber becomes an honorable scientists in Germany who had contributed to producing high explosives during World War I. Furthermore, during this time period, Haber gets recognized by producing poison gas with his colleagues. After the First World War, topic of racial hygiene becomes prevalent in Germany, and Hitler overpowers Nazi party and brain washes Germans to practice eugenics and destruction of impurities in inferior race.
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