Actually, for comparison, you should mention how many times the NYT uses the phrases 'atomic arms' or 'atomic weapons' for 'nuclear' weapons during that time-frame. That would be more germane. To do otherwise is disingenuous.Nebusj said:For comparison, by the way, in the same time frame ``quasar'' made The New York Times 39 times.
They seem to do so often, by the way, Your source seems to indicate that the two--- nuclear and atomic--- were pretty much interchangeable in the public mind, if you can judge from headlines and leads. For instance, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.
That's 22 uses of 'atomic' describing nuclear weapons or armament, out of the first 150 search results out of 879. Many of the others use interesting phrases like 'atomic reactor,' which have fallen into disuse, and which suggest that 'nuclear' and 'atomic' are not deployed consistently even now.
Oh, and even more to the point: 'atomic' seems the far more common word in TV and film sci-fi during the period. There were 15 films with 'atomic' in its title released by 1966, and only one with 'nuclear'--- a Royal Canadian Air Force training film.
It seems ST writers felt 'atomic' was the more evocative word to use. Did they literally mean 'fission' weapons? Can we know for sure?
Yeah. Given the tone of this discussion, I think 'canon-fundamentalist' is the more appropriate term.You know, Nazi means something.
