Report on the Barnhouse Effect

Kurt Vonnegut

LET ME BEGIN by saying that I don't know any more  about where Professor Arthur Barnhouse is hiding than anyone else does. Save for  one short, enigmatic message left in my mailbox on Christmas Eve, I have not  heard from him since his disappearance a year and a half ago. 

What's more,  readers of this article will be disappointed if they expect to learn how they  can bring about the so-called "Barnhouse Effect." If I were able and willing to  give away that secret, I would certainly be something more important than a  psychology instructor. 

I have been urged to write this report because I did  research under the professor's direction and because I was the first to learn of  his astonishing discovery. But while I was his student I was never entrusted  with knowledge of how the mental forces could be released and directed. He was  unwilling to trust anyone with that information. 

I would like to point out  that the term "Barnhouse Effect" is a creation of the popular press, and was  never used by Professor Barnhouse. The name he chose for the phenomenon was  "dynamopsychism," or force of the mind. 

I cannot believe that there is a  civilized person yet to be convinced that such a force exists, what with its  destructive effects on display in every national capital. I think humanity has  always had an inkling that this sort of force does exist. It has been common  knowledge that some people are luckier than others with inanimate objects like  dice. What Professor Barnhouse did was to show that such "luck" was a measurable  force, which in his case could be enormous. 

By my calculations, the professor  was about fifty-five times more powerful than a Nagasaki-type atomic bomb at the  time he went into hiding. He was not bluffing when, on the eve of "Operation  Brainstorm," he told General Hopus Barker: "Sitting here at the dinner table,  I'm pretty sure I can flatten anything on earth-from Joe Louis to the Great Wall  of China." 

There is an understandable tendency to look upon Professor  Barnhouse as a supernatural visitation. The First Church of Barnhouse in Los  Angeles has a congregation numbering in the thousands. He is godlike in neither  appearance nor intellect. The man who disarms the world is single, shorter than  the average American male, stout, and averse to exercise. His I.Q. is 143, which  is good but certainly not sensational. He is quite mortal, about to celebrate  his fortieth birthday, and in good health. If he is alone now, the isolation  won't bother him too much. He was quiet and shy when I knew him, and seemed to  find more companionship in books and music than in his associations at the  college. 

Neither he nor his powers fall outside the sphere of Nature. His  dynamopsychic radiations are subject to many known physical laws that apply in  the field of radio- hardly a person has not now heard the snarl of "Barnhouse  static" on his home receiver. The radiations are affected by sunspots and  variations in the ionosphere. However, they differ from ordinary broadcast waves  in several important ways. Their total energy can be brought to bear on any  single point the professor chooses, and that energy is undiminished by distance.  As a weapon, then, dynamopsychism has an impressive advantage over bacteria and  atomic bombs, beyond the fact that it costs nothing to use: it enables the  professor to single out critical individuals and objects instead of slaughtering  whole populations in the process of maintaining international equilibrium. 

As  General Bonus Barker told the House Military Affairs Committee: "Until someone  finds Barnhouse, there is no defense against the Barnhouse Effect." 

Efforts  to "jam" or block the radiations have failed. Premier Slezak could have saved  himself the fantastic expense of his 'Barnhouse- proof' shelter. Despite the  shelter's twelve-foot-thick lead armor, the premier has been floored twice while  in it. 

There is talk of screening the population for men potentially as  powerful dynamopsychically as the professor. Senator Warren Foust demanded funds  for this purpose last month, with the passionate declaration: "He who rules the  Barnhouse Effect rules the world!" 

Commissar Kropotnik said much the same  thing, so another costly armaments race, with a new twist, has begun. 

This  race at least has its comical aspects. The world's best gamblers are being  coddled by governments like so many nuclear physicists. There may be several  hundred persons with dynamopsychic talent on earth, myself included. But,   without knowledge of the professor's technique, they can never be anything but  dice-table despots. With the secret, it would probably take them ten years to  become dangerous weapons. It took the professor that long. He who rules the  Barnhouse Effect is Barnhouse and will be for some time. 

Popularly, the "Age  of Barnhouse" is said to have begun a year and a half ago, on the day of  Operation Brainstorm. That was when dynamopsychism became significant  politically. Actually, the phenomenon was discovered in May, 1942, shortly after  the professor turned down a direct commission in the Army and enlisted as an  artillery private. Like X-rays and vulcanized rubber, dynamopsychism was  discovered by accident. 

From time to time Private Barnhouse was invited to  take part in games of chance by his barrack mates. He knew nothing about the  games, and usually begged off. But one evening, out of social grace, he agreed  to shoot craps. It was terrible or wonderful that he played, depending upon  whether or not you like the world as it now is. 

"Shoot sevens, Pop," someone  said. So "Pop" shot sevens -ten in a row to bankrupt the barracks. He retired to  his bunk and, as a mathematical exercise, calculated the odds against his feat  on the back of a laundry slip. His chances of doing it, he found, were one in  almost ten million! Bewildered, he borrowed a pair of dice from the man in the  bunk next to his. He tried to roll sevens again, but got only the usual  assortment of numbers. He lay back for a moment, then resumed his toying with   the dice. He rolled ten more sevens in a row. 

He might have dismissed the  phenomenon with a low whistle. But the professor instead mulled over the  circumstances surrounding his two lucky streaks. There was one single factor in  common: on both occasions, the same thought train had flashed through his mind  just before he threw the dice. It was that thought train which aligned the  professor's brain cells into what has   since become the most powerful weapon on  earth. 

The soldier in the next bunk gave dynamopsychism its first token of  respect. In an understatement certain to bring wry smiles to the faces of the  world's dejected demagogues, the soldier said, "You're hotter'n a two-dollar  pistol, Pop." 

Professor Barnhouse was all of that. The dice that did his  bidding weighed but a few grams, so the forces involved were minute; but the  unmistakable fact that there were such forces was earth-shaking. 

Professional  caution kept him from revealing his discovery immediately. He wanted more facts  and a body of theory to go with them. Later, when the atomic bomb was dropped in  Hiroshima, it was fear that made him hold his peace. At no time were his  experiments, as Premier Slezak called them, "a bourgeois plot to shackle the  true democracies of the world." The professor didn't know where they were  leading. 

In time, he came to recognize another startling feature of  dynamopsychism: its strength increased with use. Within six months, he was able  to govern dice thrown by men the length of a barracks distant. By the time of  his discharge in 1945, he could knock bricks loose from chimneys three miles  away. 

Charges that Professor Barnhouse could have won the last war in a  minute, but did not care to do so, are perfectly senseless. When the war ended,  he had the range and power of a 37-millimeter cannon, perhaps--certainly no  more. His dynamopsychic powers graduated from the small-arms class only after  his discharge and return to Wyandotte College. 

I enrolled in the  Wyandotte Graduate School two years after the professor had rejoined the  faculty. By chance, he was assigned as my thesis adviser. I was unhappy about  the assignment; for the professor was, in the eyes of both colleagues and  students, a somewhat ridiculous figure. He missed classes or had lapses of  memory during lectures. When I arrived, in fact, his shortcomings had passed  from the ridiculous to the intolerable. 

"We're assigning you to Barnhouse as  a sort of temporary thing," the dean of social studies told me. He looked  apologetic and perplexed. "Brilliant man, Barnhouse I guess. Difficult to know     since his return, perhaps, but his work before the war brought a great deal of  credit to our little school." 

When I reported to the professor's laboratory  for the first time, what I saw was more distressing than the gossip. Every  surface in the room was covered with dust; books and apparatus had not been  disturbed for months. The professor sat napping at his desk when I entered. The  only signs of recent activity were three overflowing ashtrays, a pair of  scissors, and a morning paper with several items clipped from its front  page. 

As he raised his head to look at me, I saw that his eyes were clouded  with fatigue. "Hi," he said, "just can't seem to get my sleeping done at  night." 

He lighted a cigarette, his hands trembling slightly. "You the young  man I'm supposed to help with a thesis?" 

"Yes, sir," I said. In minutes he  converted my misgivings to alarm. 

"You an overseas veteran?" he  asked. 

"Yes, sir." 

"Not much left over there, is there?" He frowned.  "Enjoy the last war?" 

"No, sir." 

"Look like another war to you?" 

"Kind  of, sir." 

"What can be done about it?" 

I shrugged. "Looks pretty  hopeless." 

He peered at me intently. "Know anything about international law,  the U.N. and all that?" 

"Only what I pick up from the papers." 

"Same  here," he sighed. He showed me a fat scrapbook packed with newspaper clippings.  "Never used to pay any attention to international politics. Now I study them the  way I used to study rats in mazes. Everybody tells me the same thing- 'Looks  hopeless.' " 

"Nothing short of a miracle-" I began. 

"Believe in magic?" he  asked sharply. The professor fished two dice from his vest pocket. "I will try  to roll twos," he said. He rolled twos three times in a row. "One chance in  about 47,000 of that happening. There's a miracle for you." He beamed for an  instant, then brought the interview to an end, remarking that he had a class  which had begun ten minutes ago. 

He was not quick to take me into his  confidence, and he said no more about his trick with the dice. I assumed they  were loaded, and forgot about them. He set me the task of watching male rats  cross electrified metal strips to get to food or female rats - an experiment  that had been done to everyone's satisfaction in the nineteen-thirties. As  though the pointlessness of my work were not bad enough, the professor annoyed  me further with irrelevant questions. His favorites were: "Think we should have  dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima?" and "Think every new piece of scientific  information is a good thing for humanity?" 

However, I did not feel put upon   for long. "Give those poor animals a holiday," he said one morning, after I had  been with him only a month. "I wish you'd help me look into a more interesting  problem- namely, my sanity." 

I returned the rats to their cages. 

"What you  must do is simple," he said, speaking softly. 

"Watch the inkwell on my desk.  If you see nothing happen to it, say so, and I'll go quietly-relieved, I might  add-to the nearest sanitarium." 

I nodded uncertainly. 

He locked the   laboratory door and drew the blinds, so that we were in twilight for a moment.  "I'm odd, I know," he said. "It's fear of myself that's made me odd." 

"I've  found you somewhat eccentric, perhaps, but certainly not-" 

"If nothing  happens to that inkwell, 'crazy as a bedbug' is the only description of me that  will do," he interrupted, turning on the overhead lights. His eyes narrowed. "To  give you an idea of how crazy, I'll tell you what's been running through my mind  when I should have been sleeping. I think maybe I can save the world. I think  maybe I can make every nation a have nation, and do away with war for  good. I think maybe I can clear roads through jungles, irrigate deserts, build  dams overnight." 

"Yes, sir." 

"Watch the inkwell!" 

Dutifully and  fearfully I watched. A high-pitched humming seemed to come from the inkwell;  then it began to vibrate alarmingly, and finally to bound about the top of the  desk, making two noisy circuits. It stopped, hummed again, glowed red, then  popped in splinters with a blue- green flash. 

Perhaps my hair stood on end.  The professor laughed gently. "Magnets?" I managed to say at last. 

"Wish to  heaven it were magnets," he murmured. It was then that he told me of  dynamopsychism. He knew only that there was such a force; he could not explain  it. 

"It's me and me alone-and it's awful." 

"I'd say it was amazing and  wonderful!" I cried. 

"If all I could do was make inkwells dance, I'd be  tickled silly with the whole business." He shrugged disconsolately. "But I'm no  toy, my boy. If you like, we can drive around the neighborhood, and I'll show  you what I mean." He told me about pulverized boulders, shattered oaks, and  abandoned farm buildings demolished within a fifty-mile radius of the campus.  "Did every bit of it sitting right here, just thinking-not even thinking  hard." 

He scratched his head nervously. "I have never dared to concentrate as  hard as I can for fear of the damage I might do. I'm to the point where a mere  whim is a block- buster." There was a depressing pause. "Up until a few days  ago, I've thought it best to keep my secret for fear of what use it might be put  to," he continued. "Now I realize that I haven't any more right to it than a man  has a right to own an atomic bomb." 

He fumbled through a heap of papers.  "This says about all that needs to be said, I think." He handed me a draft of a  letter to the Secretary of State. 

Dear  Sir: 

        I have discovered a new force which costs  nothing 

        to use, and which is probably more  important than 

        atomic energy. I should like to  see it used most effec- 

        tively in the cause of  peace, and am, therefore, re- 

        questing your  advice as to how this might best be 

         done. 

                Yours  truly, 

                A.  Barnhouse. 

"I have no idea what will happen next," said the  professor. 

There followed three months of perpetual nightmare, wherein the  nation's political and military great came at all hours to watch the professor's  tricks. 

We were quartered in an old mansion near Charlottesville, Virginia,  to which we had been whisked five days after the letter was mailed. Surrounded  by barbed wire and twenty guards, we were labeled "Project Wishing Well," and  were classified as Top Secret. 

For companionship we had General Honus Barker  and the State Department's William K. Cuthrell. For the professor's talk of  peace-through-plenty they had indulgent smiles and much discourse on practical  measures and realistic thinking. So treated, the professor, who had at first  been almost meek, progressed in a matter of weeks toward stubbornness. 

He had  agreed to reveal the thought train by means of which he aligned his mind into a  dynamopsychic transmitter. But, under Cuthrell's and Barker's nagging to do so,  he began to hedge. At first he declared that the information could be passed on  simply by word of mouth. Later he said that it would have to be written up in a  long report. Finally, at dinner one night, just after General Barker had read  the secret orders for Operation Brainstorm, the professor announced, "The report  may take as long as five years to write." He looked fiercely at the general.  "Maybe twenty ." 

The dismay occasioned by this flat announcement was offset  somewhat by the exciting anticipation of Operation Brainstorm. The general was  in a holiday mood. "The target ships are on their way to the Caroline Islands at  this very moment," he declared ecstatically. "One hundred and twenty of them! At  the same time, ten V-2s are being readied for firing in New Mexico, and fifty  radio-controlled jet bombers are being equipped for a mock attack on the  Aleutians. Just think of it!" Happily he reviewed his orders. "At exactly 1100  hours next Wednesday, I will give you the order to concentrate; and you,  professor, will think as hard as you can about sinking the target ships,  destroying the V-2s before they hit the ground, and knocking down the bombers  before they reach the Aleutians! Think you can handle it?" 

The professor  turned gray and closed his eyes. " As I told you before, my friend, I don't know  what I can do." 

He added bitterly, " As for this Operation Brainstorm, I was  never consulted about it, and it strikes me as childish and insanely  expensive." 

General Barker bridled. "Sir," he said, "your field is  psychology, and I wouldn't presume to give you advice in that field. Mine is  national defense. I have had thirty years of experience and success, Professor,  and I'll ask you not to criticize my judgment." 

The professor appealed to Mr.  Cuthrell. "Look," he pleaded, "isn't it war and military matters we're all  trying to get rid of? Wouldn't it be a whole lot more significant and lots  cheaper for me to try moving cloud masses into drought areas, and things like  that? I admit I know next to nothing about international politics, but it seems  reason- able to suppose that nobody would want to fight wars if there were  enough of everything to go around. Mr. Cuthrell, I'd like to try running  generators where there isn't any coal or water power, irrigating deserts, and so  on. Why, you could figure out what each country needs to make the most of its  resources, and I could give it to them without costing American taxpayers a  penny." 

"Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom," said the general  heavily. 

Mr. Cuthrell threw the general a look of mild distaste.  "Unfortunately, the general is right in his own way," he said. "I wish to heaven  the world were ready for ideals like yours, but it simply isn't. We aren't  surrounded by brothers, but by enemies. It isn't a lack of food or resources  that has us on the brink of war-it's a struggle for power. Who's going to be in  charge of the world, our kind of people or theirs?" 

The professor nodded in  reluctant agreement and arose from the table. "I beg your pardon, gentlemen. You  are, after all, better qualified to judge what is best for the country. I'll do  whatever you say." He turned to me. "Don't forget to wind the restricted clock  and put the confidential cat out," he said gloomily, and ascended the stairs of  his bedroom. 

For reasons of national security, Operation Brainstorm was  carried on without the knowledge of the American citizenry which was paying the  bill. The observers, technicians, and military men involved in the activity knew  that a test was under way -a test of what, they had no idea. Only thirty-seven  key men, myself included, knew what was afoot. 

In Virginia, the day for  Operation Brainstorm was unseasonably cool. Inside, a log fire crackled in the  fireplace, and the flames were reflected in the polished metal cabinets that  lined the living room. All that remained of the room's lovely old furniture was  a Victorian love seat, set squarely in the center of the floor, facing three  television receivers.   One long bench had been brought in for the ten of us  privileged to watch. The television screens showed, from left to right, the  stretch of desert which was the rocket target, the guinea-pig fleet, and a  section of the Aleutian sky through which the radio-controlled bomber formation  would roar. 

Ninety minutes before H-hour the radios announced that the  rockets were ready, that the observation ships had backed away to what was  thought to be a safe distance, and that the bombers were on their way. The small  Virginia audience lined up on the bench in order of rank, smoked a great deal,  and said little. Professor Barnhouse was in his bedroom. General Barker bustled  about the house like a woman preparing Thanksgiving dinner for twenty. 

At ten  minutes before H-hour the general came in, shepherding the professor before him.  The professor was comfortably attired in sneakers, gray flannels, a blue  sweater, and a white shirt open at the neck. The two of them sat side by side on  the love seat. The general was rigid and perspiring; the professor was cheerful.  He looked at each of the screens, lighted a cigarette and settled  back. 

"Bombers sighted!" cried the Aleutian observers. 

"Rockets away!"  barked the New Mexico radio operator. 

All of us looked quickly at the big  electric clock over the mantel, while the professor, a half-smile on his face,  continued to watch the television sets. In hollow tones, the general counted  away the seconds remaining. "Five. .. four. ..three. ..two ..one.  ..Concentrate!" 

Professor Barnhouse closed his eyes, pursed his lips, and  stroked his temples. He held the position for a minute. The television images  were scrambled, and the radio signals were drowned in the din of Barnhouse  static. The professor sighed, opened his eyes, and smiled confidently. 

"Did  you give it everything you had?" asked the general dubiously. 

"I was wide    open," the professor replied. 

The television images pulled themselves  together, and mingled cries of amazement came over the radios tuned to the  observers. The Aleutian sky was streaked with the smoke trails of bombers  screaming down in flames. Simultaneously, there appeared high over the rocket  target a cluster of white puffs, followed by faint thunder. 

General Barker  shook his head happily. "By George!" he crowed. "Well, sir: by George, by  George, by George!" 

"Look!" shouted the admiral seated next to me. "The  fleet-it wasn't touched!" 

"The guns seem to be drooping,"said Mr.  Cuthrell. 

We left the bench and clustered about the television sets to  examine the damage more closely. What Mr. Cuthrell had said was true. The ships'  guns curved downward, their muzzles resting on the steel decks. We in Virginia  were making such a hullabaloo that it was impossible to hear the radio reports.  We were so engrossed, in fact, that we didn't miss the professor until two short  snarls of Barnhouse static shocked us into sudden silence. The radios went  dead. 

We looked around apprehensively. The professor was gone. A harassed  guard threw open the front door from the outside to yell that the professor had  escaped. He brandished his pistol in the direction of the gates, which hung  open, limp and twisted. In the distance, a speeding government station wagon  topped a ridge and dropped from sight into the valley beyond. The air was filled  with choking smoke, for every vehicle on the grounds was ablaze. Pursuit was  impossible. 

"What in God's name got into him?" bellowed the general. 

Mr.  Cuthrell, who had rushed out onto the front porch, now slouched back into the  room, reading a penciled note as he came. He thrust the note into my hands. "The  good man left this billet-doux under the door knocker. Perhaps our young friend  here will be kind enough to read it to you gentlemen, while I take a restful  walk through the woods." 

"Gentlemen," I read aloud, "As the first  superweapon with a conscience, I am removing myself from your national defense  stockpile. Setting a new precedent in the behavior of ordnance, I have humane  reasons for going off. A. Barnhouse." 

Since that day, of course, the  professor has been systematically destroying the world's armaments, until there  is now little with which to equip an army other than rocks and sharp sticks. His  activities haven't exactly resulted in peace, but have, rather, precipitated a  bloodless and entertaining sort of war that might be called the "War of the  Tattletales. " Every nation is flooded with enemy agents whose sole mission is  to locate military equipment, which is promptly wrecked when it is brought to  the professor's attention in the press. 

Just as every day brings news of more  armaments pulverized by dynamopsychism, so has it brought rumors of the  professor's whereabouts. During last week alone, three publications carried  articles proving variously that he was hiding in an Inca ruin in the Andes, in  the sewers of Paris, and in the unexplored lower chambers of Carlsbad Caverns.  Knowing the man, I am inclined to regard such hiding places as unnecessarily  romantic and uncomfortable. While there are numerous persons eager to kill him,  there must be millions who would care for him and hide him. I like to think that  he is in the home of such a person. 

One thing is certain: at this writing,  Professor Barnhouse is not dead, barnhouse static jammed broadcasts not ten  minutes ago. In the eighteen months since his disappearance, he has been  reported dead some half -dozen times. Each report has stemmed from the death of  an unidentified man resembling the professor, during a period free of the  static. The first three reports were followed at once by renewed talk of  rearmament and recourse to war. The saber-rattlers have learned how imprudent  premature celebrations of the professor's demise can be. 

Many a stouthearted  patriot has found himself prone in the tangled bunting and timbers of a smashed  reviewing stand, seconds after having announced that the arch-tyranny of  Barnhouse was at an end. But those who would make war if they could, in every  country in the world, wait in sullen silence for what must come-the passing of  Professor Barnhouse. 

To ask how much longer the professor will live  is to ask how much longer We must wait for the blessing of another world war. He  is of short-lived stock: his mother lived to be flfty-three, his father to be  forty-nine; and the life-spans of his grandparents on both sides were of the  same order. He might be expected to live, then, for perhaps fifteen years more,  if he can remain hidden from his enemies. When one considers the number and  vigor of these enemies, however, fifteen years seems an extraordinary length of  time, which might better be revised to fifteen days, hours, or minutes. 

The  professor knows that he cannot live much longer. I say this because of the  message left in my mailbox on Christmas Eve. Unsigned, typewritten on a soiled  scrap of paper, the note consisted of ten sentences. The first nine of these,  each a bewildering tangle of psychological jargon and references to obscure  texts, made no sense to me at first reading. The tenth, unlike the rest, was  simply constructed and contained no large words-but its irrational content made  it the most puzzling and bizarre sentence of all. I nearly threw the note away,  thinking it a colleague's warped notion of a practical joke. For some reason,  though, I added it to the clutter on top of my desk, which included, among other  mementos, the professor's dice. 

It took me several weeks to realize that the  message really meant something, that the first nine sentences, when unsnarled,  could be taken as instructions. The tenth still told me nothing. It was only  last night that I discovered how it fitted in with the rest. The sentence  appeared in my thoughts last night, while I was toying absently with the  professor's dice. 

I promised to have this report on its way to the publishers  today. In view of what has happened. I am obliged to break that promise, or  release the report incomplete. The delay will not be a long one, for one of the  few blessings accorded a bachelor like myself is the ability to move quickly  from one abode to another, or from one way of life to another. What property I  want to take with me can be packed in a few hours. Fortunately, I am not without  substantial private means, which may take as long as a week to realize in liquid  and anonymous form. When this is done, I shall mail the report. 

I have just  returned from a visit to my doctor, who tells me my health is excellent. I am  young, and, with any luck at all, I shall live to a ripe old age indeed, for my  family on both sides is noted for longevity. 

Briefly, I propose to  vanish. 

Sooner or later, Professor Barnhouse must die. But long before then I  shall be ready. So, to the saber-rattlers of today-and even, I hope, of  tomorrow-I say: Be advised. Barnhouse will die. But not the Barnhouse  Effect. 

Last night, I tried once more to follow the oblique instructions on  the scrap of paper. I took the professor's dice, and then, with the last,  nightmarish sentence flitting through my mind, I rolled fifty consecutive  sevens. 

Good-by.