Lomanitz, what do you get paid a month? That's not the point, Lawrence. What do any of you have in common with farm laborers and dock workers? LOMANITZ: Plenty.
Oppenheimer
5.9s
Of course she knows. (sighs) We're awful people. Selfish, awful people.
Oppenheimer
3.9s
The Harvard guys, they say the building's too small for the cyclotron.
Oppenheimer
2.7s
Everybody out. Now!
Oppenheimer
3.3s
I have been going to him all fucking day.
Oppenheimer
4.5s
Lawrence won't get this done. Or Tolman or Rabi. You will.
Oppenheimer
9.8s
ROBERT: After Göttingen, I moved on to Leiden in Holland where I first met Isidor Rabi. (clears throat) Excuse me. (grunts)
Oppenheimer
1.6s
(clears throat)
Oppenheimer
43.1s
(indistinct chatter) - Wonderful. - Thank you. Dr. Oppenheimer. Oppenheimer, yes. I liked your paper on molecules. Probably because you inspired it. If I inspire anything else, let me know. We could publish together. I have to get back to America. Why? There's no one there taking quantum mechanics seriously. - That's exactly why. - (sighs) He's pining for the canyons of Manhattan. ROBERT: Canyons of New Mexico. - You're from New Mexico? - No. New York, but my brother and I have a ranch outside Santa Fe. (inhales) That's the America I miss right now. Then it's best you get home, cowboys. - (Robert chuckles) - (chuckles) That's him. No, me and horses. I don't think so. - (Rabi chuckles) - Nice to meet you.
Oppenheimer
2.2s
ROBERT: Dr. Lawrence, I presume?
Oppenheimer
4.3s
Yeah. Yes, this is it. Please. Take a seat.
Oppenheimer
1.9s
This is your moment.
Oppenheimer
8.1s
That's you. You are the man for the job. Well, then I'll consider it. I'll see you at the AEC meeting tomorrow.
Oppenheimer
12.3s
I don't know how to say this. I'm... I'm ashamed to ask. CHEVALIER: Anything. Take Peter. - Sure. - No, for-for a while, Hoke. A while.
Oppenheimer
2.1s
Wait, what's he saying?
Oppenheimer
8.7s
Can you run them again? No, you'll get the same answer. Till they actually detonate one of these things, the best assurance you're going to get is this. Near zero.
Oppenheimer
21.6s
So here we are, hmm? Lost in your quantum world of probabilities and needing certainty. Can you run the calculations yourself? (chuckles) About the only thing you and I have in common is a disdain for mathematics. Who's working on this in-in Berkeley? Hans Bethe. Well, he'll get to the truth.