Letter of three hundred
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
The letter of three hundred (Russian: "Письмо трёхсот") was a 22-page memorandum signed by about 300 scientists in order to highlight the destruction of Soviet science in general and genetics in particular by the pseudoscientist Trofim Lysenko. It was sent to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union on October 11, 1955.
Overview
[edit]It resulted in the resignation of T. D. Lysenko from his position as president of the VASKhNIL, despite support for him from Nikita Khrushchev who had taken command after the death of Joseph Stalin. An extract of the letter was first made public in January 13, 1989 by Pravda newspaper but the authors were not made public until 2005.
The letter highlighted the shame brought to Soviet science by Lysenko and his supporters who travelled and spoke around the world providing what they claimed as food for anti-Soviet propaganda. They noted the speech of N.I. Nuzhdin in Karachi in 1954 and of I.E. Gluschenko in 1950 where ignorance of basic science was demonstrated.
The letter resulted in the resignation of Lysenko from the position of president of VASKhNIL in 1956 but through Khrushchev's influence he returned to power in 1958-59. It was after the end of Khrushchev's rule in October 1964 that Lysenko lost support. In February 1965, Lysenko was finally dismissed from the institute of genetics, and later on a commission revealed many of his unethical practices, irreparably damaging his reputation.[1]
Signatories
[edit]The signatories included many Soviet scientists associated with Moscow University including:
- P.S. Alexandrov
- L.A. Artsimovich
- B. L. Astaurov
- Ya.A. Birshtein
- V.G. Geptner
- M.S. Gilyarov
- V.L. Ginzburg
- I.N. Vekua
- A.G. Voronov
- G.P. Dementiev
- N.P. Dubinin
- L.A. Zenkevich
- M.V. Keldysh
- L.V. Krushinsky
- B.A. Kudryashov
- M.A. Lavrentiev
- L.D. Landau
- G.S. Landsberg
- M.A. Leontovich
- A.A. Lyapunov
- A.I. Markushevich
- K.I. Meyer
- V.V. Nemytsky
- V.V. Popov
- Ya.Ya. Roginsky
- A.D. Sakharov
- S.L. Sobolev
- V.N. Sukachev
- I.E. Tamm
- N.V. Timofeev-Ressovsky
- A.N. Tikhonov
- S.S. Turov
- A.N. Formozov
- A.I. Frumkin
- A.I. Shalnikov
- I.R. Shafarevich
- and S.V. Yablonsky.
Those who were not affiliated with the university included
- A.I. Alikhanov
- A.I. Alikhanyan
- A.N. Bakulev
- I.M. Vinogradov
- Ya.B. Zeldovich
- P.L. Kapitsa
- A.B. Migdal
- V.S. Nemchinov
- I.Ya. Pomeranchuk
- Yu.B. Khariton
- S.A. Khristianovich
- G.N. Flerov.
The draft of the letter was examined and approved by I. V. Kurchatov and A.N. Nesmeyanov who were members of the central committee who could not sign it on account of the positions they held. An accompanying note was prepared by P.A. Baranov and N.P. Dubinin. They however ensured that it went to Khrushchev who was very upset and termed the letter "outrageous."[2][3][4]
References
[edit]- ^ Fujiyoka, Tsuyoshi (2016). "Japanese Lysenkoists after Lysenko's Downfall" (PDF). Historia Scientiarum. 26 (1): 15–24.
- ^ Захаров, И.К.; Шумный, В.К. (2005). "К 50-ЛЕТИЮ "ПИСЬМА ТРЁХСОТ"" (PDF). Вестник ВОГиС. 9 (1): 12–13.
- ^ "ЭС: Сессия ВАСХНИЛ 1948 г."
- ^ Жимулёв И.Ф.; Дубинина Л.Г. "Новое о «Письме трёхсот» - массовом протесте советских учёных против лысенковщины в 1955 г.". Вестник ВОГиС. 9 (1): 13–33.