:34:03
This was his testament:
:34:06
''The fate of a modern scientist
is tragic.
:34:10
His inspiration leads him to clarity
and inner independence.
:34:14
By almost superhuman efforts
:34:16
he had forged a weapon
of his own social enslavement
:34:20
and destruction of his personality.
:34:22
The situation even reached a point
:34:24
where the political authorities
had muzzled him.
:34:28
Has the time really passed
:34:30
when the scientist's intellectual
freedom and independent research
:34:33
could enlighten
and enrich people's lives?
:34:37
Has he forgotten, in his blind
quest for the scientific truth,
:34:41
about his moral responsibility before
humanity and about his honour?
:34:45
Our world is under threat of a crisis
:34:48
the scope of which seems not to be
realized by those in authority...
:34:51
The released power of the atom changed
everything but our way of thinking,
:34:55
and thus we keep sliding down to
a catastrophe never seen heretofore.
:35:03
For the mankind to survive, we have
to learn to think in a new way.
:35:09
The most difficult task of our time
is to avert this threat.
:35:13
At this decisive moment,
:35:16
l'll be appealing to you
with all my feeble capacity.''
:35:21
Our program ''The world's great
thinkers: Albert Einstein'' is over.
:35:26
Now listen to a concert of light
music.