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‚T‚W(1961)
Fact and Fiction.

‚PDLondon; Allen & Unwin, 1961. 282 p. 22 cm.
[Contents]
Pt.1: Books that influenced me in youth. 1.The importance of Shelly. 2.The romance of revolt. 3.Revolt in the abstract. 4.Disgust and its antidote. 5.An education in history. 6.The pursuit of truth. Pt.2: Politics and education. 1.What is freedom? 2.What is democracy? 3.A scientist's plea for democracy. 4.The story of colonization. 5.Pros and cons of nationalism. 6.The reasoning of Europeans. 7.The wolrd I should like to live in. 8.Old and young cultures. 9.Education for a difficult world. 10.University education. Pt.3: Divertissements. 1.Cranks. 2.The right will prevail or the road to Lhasa. 3.Newly discovered maxims of La Rochefoucauld. 4.Nightmares. 4-1.The fisherman's nightmare or Magna est veritas. 4-2.The theologian's nightmare. 5.Dreams. 5-1.Jowett. 5-2.God. 5-3.Henry the navigator. 5-4.Prince Napoleon Louis. 5-5.The catalogue. 6.Parables. 6-1.Planetary efflugence. 6-2.The misfortune of being out-of-date. 6-3.Murderer's fatherland. Pt.4: Peace and war. 1.Psychology and East-West tension. 2.War and peace in my lifetime. 3.The social responsibilities of scientists. 4.Three essentials for a stable world. 5.Population pressure and war. 6.Formal address to the Congress of the Pugwash Movement at Vienna, Sept. 20th, 1958. 7.Address to the C.N.D. meeting at Manchester, May 1st, 1959. 8.What neutrals can do to save the world. 9.The case for British neutralism. 10.Can war be abolished? 11.Human life is in danger. No index.
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‚QDNew York; Simon & Schuster, 1962. 317 p. 21 cm.

‚T‚X(1961)
Has Man a Future ?

‚PDLondon; Allen & Unwin, 1961. 136 p. 20 cm.
[Contents]
1.Prologue or epilogue. 2.The bomb. 3.The H-bomb. 4.Liberty or death? 5.Scientists and the H-bomb. 6.Long-term conditions of human survival. 7.Why world government is disliked. 8.First steps towards secure peace. 9.Disarmament. 10.Territorial problems. 11.A stable world. Recommended books.
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‚QDHarmondsworth, Middlesex; Penguin Books, 1961. 128 p. port. 19 cm. (Penguin specials, S206)
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‚RDNew York; Simon & Schuster, 1961. 128 p. 19 cm.


‚U‚O(1963)
Unarmed Victory.

‚PDLondon; Allen & Unwin, 1963. 155 p. 19 cm.
[Contents]
I.The international bakcground. II.The Cuban crisis. a.The Castro regime in the U.S.A. b.The days of crisis. c.The settlement. III.The Sino-Indian dispute. a.Outline of the genesis of the dispute. b.The dispute. c.The aftermath. IV.Lessons of the two crises. No index.
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‚QDBaltimore; Penguin Books, 1963. 119 p. 19 cm. (Penguin special, S220)

‚RDNew York; Simon & Schuster, 1963. 155 p. 21 cm.
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