Undiscovered

Kurt Vonnegut and the Rainmakers


Listen Later

In the mid 1940s, no one would publish Kurt Vonnegut’s stories. But when he gets hired as a press writer at General Electric, the company’s fantastical science inspires some of his most iconic--and best-selling--novels.

Every snowflake is unique—except they all have six sides. In ice, water molecules arrange themselves into hexagons.

(Courtesy MiSci Museum)

Imagine the Earth has been turned into a frozen wasteland. The culprit? Ice-nine. With a crystalline structure that makes it solid at room temperature, ice-nine freezes every drop of water it comes into contact with, and (predictably) ends up destroying the world. This is the fantastical plot of Kurt Vonnegut’s 1963 novel, Cat’s Cradle. But the science that inspired the fiction came from the real-life research his older brother and team of scientists at General Electric conducted just after World War II.

General Electric might be best known for manufacturing refrigerators and light bulbs, but in the 1940s, the GE scientists joined forces with the military and set their sights on a loftier project: controlling the weather.

Controlling the weather could mean putting an end to droughts and raining out forest fires. But the GE scientists’ military collaborators have more aggressive plans in mind. Kurt, a pacifist, closely watches GE’s saga unfold, and in his stories, he demands an answer to one of science’s greatest ethical questions: are scientists responsible for the pursuit of knowledge alone, or are they also responsible for the consequences of that knowledge?

 

Vincent Schaefer of the General Electric Research Laboratory demonstrates his method for making snow in a laboratory freezer, circa 1947.

Vincent Schaefer, colleague of Bernie Vonnegut, makes man-made snow in a freezer at General Electric.

(Courtesy of MiSci Museum)

 

Vincent Schaefer gives a demonstration of the team’s cloud seeding research to Signal Corps at GE laboratories in 1947.

(Courtesy of MiSci Museum)

  

(Original art by Claire Merchlinsky)

 

GUESTS

    Ginger Strand, author of The Brothers Vonnegut: Science and Fiction in the House of Magic
    Cynthia Barnett, author of Rain: A Natural and Cultural History
     

    CREDITS

    This episode of Undiscovered was reported and produced by Elah Feder and Annie Minoff. Editing by Christopher Intagliata. Archival material was provided with help from Chris Hunter of miSci in Schenectady, as well as Scott Vonnegut and Jim Schaefer. Fact-checking help by Michelle Harris. Voice acting by Charles Bergquist, Christie Taylor, Luke Groskin, and Ira Flatow. Original music by Daniel Peterschmidt. Our theme music is by I am Robot and Proud. Art for this episode by Claire Merchlinsky. Thanks to Science Friday’s Danielle Dana, Christian Skotte, Brandon Echter, and Rachel Bouton.

     

    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    UndiscoveredBy Science Friday and WNYC Studios

    • 4.7
    • 4.7
    • 4.7
    • 4.7
    • 4.7

    4.7

    753 ratings


    More shows like Undiscovered

    View all
    This American Life by This American Life

    This American Life

    91,225 Listeners

    Stuff You Should Know by iHeartPodcasts

    Stuff You Should Know

    78,708 Listeners

    Radiolab by WNYC Studios

    Radiolab

    43,820 Listeners

    Freakonomics Radio by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

    Freakonomics Radio

    32,234 Listeners

    Fresh Air by NPR

    Fresh Air

    38,499 Listeners

    The New Yorker Radio Hour by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

    The New Yorker Radio Hour

    6,955 Listeners

    Stuff You Missed in History Class by iHeartPodcasts

    Stuff You Missed in History Class

    23,793 Listeners

    Hidden Brain by Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam

    Hidden Brain

    43,653 Listeners

    Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! by NPR

    Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

    38,880 Listeners

    99% Invisible by Roman Mars

    99% Invisible

    26,263 Listeners

    Stuff To Blow Your Mind by iHeartPodcasts

    Stuff To Blow Your Mind

    5,671 Listeners

    On the Media by WNYC Studios

    On the Media

    9,229 Listeners

    The Brian Lehrer Show by WNYC

    The Brian Lehrer Show

    1,581 Listeners

    the memory palace by Nate DiMeo

    the memory palace

    6,888 Listeners

    Death, Sex & Money by Slate Podcasts

    Death, Sex & Money

    7,714 Listeners

    Science Friday by Science Friday and WNYC Studios

    Science Friday

    6,441 Listeners

    Something You Should Know by Mike Carruthers | OmniCast Media

    Something You Should Know

    4,242 Listeners

    Spooked by KQED and Snap Studios

    Spooked

    16,644 Listeners

    The Anthropocene Reviewed by Complexly, John Green

    The Anthropocene Reviewed

    9,334 Listeners

    Throughline by NPR

    Throughline

    16,497 Listeners

    Dolly Parton's America by WNYC Studios & OSM Audio

    Dolly Parton's America

    16,406 Listeners

    Terrestrials by WNYC

    Terrestrials

    1,184 Listeners