ABSTRACT

In 1971, I had just gotten my high-school diploma. Shortly after, we had the first oil-price crisis and the Club of Rome published the Limits to Growth. As a young student I felt closely linked to the rebellious, relieving, and questioning ideas of the German student revolt of 1968 and I wondered how the problems of tighter resources and destruction of nature could be overcome. I realised quickly that one of the main dangers to our world was the use of the fossil and atomic resources. Suppression, exploitation, spoiling the natural environment, and conflicts about oil were already on the agenda in those days. I realised more and more during my studies of physics the problems associated with the use of the atomic energy; I could not simply believe in the many “atomic” claims expressed by my professors and put them into doubt. This was complemented in the early 80s by the awareness of the drama of global change.