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Acid Test: The AD-X2 Affair and the Political Awakening of American Science

Martin, Joseph D

Authors



Abstract

In March 1953, Allen Astin, Director of the National Bureau of Standards, lost his job. He was fired by Sinclair Weeks, Dwight Eisenhower's newly confirmed Secretary of Commerce. The bureau had concluded that AD-X2, an after-market additive advertised as extending the life of automotive batteries, was ineffective. Weeks regarded the condemnation as an attack on small business and sought to install friendlier leadership at the bureau. American scientists were outraged. A frenetic mobilization quickly organized censures by dozens of scientific organizations and forced Weeks to back down; Astin would lead the bureau until his retirement in 1969. Attention to this episode clarifies how the American scientific community translated the attention nuclear weapons brought into concrete political influence-not through leveraging the power of the bomb, but by brandishing their apolitical credentials to exert control over key institutions and by emphasizing the centrality of routine scientific practice to national priorities.

Citation

Martin, J. D. (in press). Acid Test: The AD-X2 Affair and the Political Awakening of American Science. American Quarterly, 77(3),

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 28, 2025
Deposit Date Mar 4, 2025
Journal American Quarterly
Print ISSN 0003-0678
Electronic ISSN 1080-6490
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 77
Issue 3
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3671714
Publisher URL https://muse.jhu.edu/journal/13

This file is under embargo due to copyright reasons.





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