The Socialism of Freeman Dyson 17/12/2020 Freeman Dyson, August 2007. Photo: Monroem/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. On February 28, just a few weeks before the United States plunged into lockdown, the world lost the visionary physicist and mathematician Freeman Dyson. Although widely celebrated for his expansive scientific achievements, eulogisers have given scant attention to his progressive political imagination and longtime identification as a pacifist and socialist. Five years ago, when the New York Times asked him which writers he’d invite to a literary dinner party, Dyson chose three women he already knew so he “would not need to waste time on formal introductions”: the classical archeologist Joan Breton Connelly, the science fiction writer Mary Doria Russell, and me. He said he selected his guests because all of our books explored “the mystery of self-sacrifice,” of what inspired ordinary men and women to ignore their own self-interest for the sake of the greater good. The key to the future, he seemed to indicate, hinged on understanding the roots of altruism.