When Oppenheimer filmmaker Christopher Nolan received the Federation of American Scientists’ Public Service Award earlier this month, in recognition of his cultural contribution by bringing J. Robert Oppenheimer’s story to broader attention through cinema, he made a “plea” to scientists.

At the heart of his speech was a dichotomy between the scientist and the storyteller, in terms of their relationship to, and dialogue with society at large. As a filmmaker, he explained, you’re given license to manufacture meaning by making a “dramatic choice.” This happened for him on Oppenheimer when grappling with the ending of his story on the invention of the atomic bomb, which would lean either toward hope for the future of the world, or toward despair. Truthfully, Nolan suggested, the story of nuclear power continues to be written, well beyond the years his film covers, as technology evolves and geopolitical power shifts. But in any case, his choice was to lean toward despair, out of a desire to “put the audience in the mind of” Oppenheimer, a man grappling with the potential consequences of his own work.

The point on Nolan’s part is that if storytellers are allowed to generalize or draw certain conclusions to achieve a certain impact, scientists have no such liberty. Whereas a filmmaker is expected to come to a project with a point of view, the difficult and necessary work of a scientist is to wrestle with contradictory ideas and remain open, without rejecting any out of hand. The work of the scientist is never done, given the likelihood that they’ll be forced to reexamine previously held truths, as new facts continue to emerge.

“Science is truth, and science seeks to disprove itself,” Nolan said. “It’s proud to say when it’s wrong because that means something’s been learned and something’s been improved, and in case it hadn’t occurred to you, or in case you’re wondering, there’s nobody else on earth doing that but scientists.”

The hope on Nolan’s part, in addressing scientists at the FAS Awards ceremony, was that professionals in this arena will retain qualities he sees lacking right now not only in storytelling, but in the world at large — the ability to hold contradictory ideas in one’s mind at the same time, and the willingness to perpetually challenge one’s own thoughts. “When it comes to issues of dialogue around the communication of science, and how that can help our world, and how here in Washington, you are able to interact with policymakers, I would make the plea, please don’t sink to [the public’s] level,” Nolan said. “Keep on speaking the truth in the terms in which it needs to be expressed, and if there are complexities and contradictions within that truth, please keep telling the truth and trust that we will find a way to listen.”

The urgency of this message, Nolan said, is that all is sure to be “lost” without preserving the “elevated discourse” consistent with the scientific enterprise. “In a world where everybody is shouting all of the time, science risks losing its voice if it tries to shout as loudly as everybody else does,” he said, “so trust us to find a way to listen to you and keep doing this wonderful thing that you’re doing.”

At the Federation of American Scientists’ awards ceremony on November 16, Nolan was honored alongside Senators Chuck Schumer and Todd Young, scholar Dr. Alondra Nelson, and scientist Alexa White. Elsewhere in his speech, Nolan spoke to artists like Kip Thorne that he’s had the “great privilege” of working closely with over the course of his career, among other topics. Check out his remarks in full above.

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Source: DLine

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