Listen "Adaptive Secrecy in the Making of the Atomic Bomb (Borpujari 2025) | FT50 OrgSci"
Episode Synopsis
English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:32:43Hindi Podcast Starts at 01:09:46ReferenceBorpujari, R. (2025). Adaptive Secrecy in the Making of the Atomic Bomb: Toward a Process View of Secretive Innovation. Organization Science. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2023.17687Youtube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherConnect over linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/🎙️ Welcome to “Revise and Resubmit” — the podcast where ideas evolve, research gets a second life, and the world of academia finds its rhythm again! 🌍✨Today, we’re diving into a story wrapped in silence, ambition, and atomic brilliance — a story that changed the world, one guarded secret at a time.💥 The paper we’re exploring is titled “Adaptive Secrecy in the Making of the Atomic Bomb: Toward a Process View of Secretive Innovation”, authored by Rohin Borpujari and published in the prestigious Organization Science — yes, you heard it right — an FT50 journal, powered by INFORMS. 🏛️📚In this thought-provoking study, Borpujari takes us back to the Manhattan Project — a time when scientists, soldiers, and statesmen worked in the shadows, balancing knowledge creation with the peril of exposure. What happens when innovation itself becomes a secret weapon? 🔐Through the lens of adaptive secrecy, we witness how the boundaries between sharing and concealing knowledge aren’t fixed — they shift like sand dunes under wartime winds. The paper uncovers three types of uncertainty — evaluative, boundary, and performance — and shows how organizations use adaptive disclosures to navigate them: sometimes revealing a little, sometimes hiding even that revelation.In a world obsessed with transparency, this paper makes us ask: maybe secrecy isn’t the enemy of innovation... maybe it’s the silent architect of it? 🤔So, as we unpack how secrecy adapts, evolves, and sometimes saves innovation itself, let’s pause and wonder —💭 What if the world’s greatest discoveries were born not in light... but in the disciplined darkness of secrecy?🙏 Special thanks to Rohin Borpujari for this remarkable contribution and to INFORMS for publishing it in Organization Science, one of academia’s most respected FT50 journals.🎧 Don’t forget to subscribe to “Revise and Resubmit” on Spotify, and follow our YouTube channel “Weekend Researcher” for more such deep dives into the minds of brilliant scholars. We’re also streaming on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast — because good research deserves every platform. 🌐🎓Stay curious. Stay inspired. And remember — sometimes, even knowledge wears a cloak. 🕵️♂️✨
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