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Hardcover The Private Lives of Albert Einstein Book

ISBN: 0312110472

ISBN13: 9780312110475

The Private Lives of Albert Einstein

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

This controversial account of Albert Einstein's scandalous personal life challenges the image of this genius, painting a shocking portrait that exposes him as "an adulterous, egomaniacal misogynist who may have even beaten his first wife"(The New York Times Sunday Magazine). Photos.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Totally smashs the Einstein myth created by the court historians of physics

Highfield and Carter (HC) completely demolish the myth created by the Einstein establishment in physics of Saint Einstein.HC demonstrate that Albert Einstein was a misogynist who abandoned/mistreated his children.His basic reason for associating with the opposite sex was to obtain sex.All of Albert's relationships with women were purely sexual .Albert Einstein's interactions with his children and wives were based on deception,duplicity,and deviousness. HC also show that Albert Einstein was a genius who failed to acknowledge the help and collaboration in his published work.It is absurd for a journal editor to publish a paper,(Einstein's first 1905 paper was on the photoelectric effect;the second paper was on Brownian motion;the third paper was on relativity and had no references;and the last paper established the foundation for the E= m c squared result concerning the relationship between mass and energy) with no references or bibliography.Yet this is exactly what happened . HC dropped the ball by not explicitly discussing the highly technical discussions that took place in a number of the letters(54) exchanged between Albert and Meliva in the time period between 1897 and 1903.The 47 letters exchanged between 1897 and 1901 contain some highly technical discussions in which Albert asks for help.The smoking gun appears when Albert refers to "our work" and "our theory".These words mean exactly what they say.

The myth of Albert Einstein

This a very good book. Two able researchers put their heads together and did all the research. The result is a fascinating picture of a rather unhappy man who had his moment of glory and spent the rest of his life chasing a wild goose--a unified theory. I wouldn't say they shattered the myth of Einstein, but they do point out that he might have had some help with relativity and did very little in physics in the last 30 years of his life--all the time he spent at Princeton, in fact--except deny the truth of quantum physics, probably the most elegant theory ever devised by the human mind.My (small) problem with this book is that the authors expect us to believe that Einstein, a PhD in physics, 1) had never heard of Brownian motion prior to his paper on molecules in 1905; and 2) published his paper on relativity in 1905 with no footnotes or attributions because he "was unaware of the need to give credit where it was due" (p. 105). Really. This book did a lot to support my long-held view that Einstein's reputation is vastly overrated. He was a great physicist during the first part of of the 20th century, but there were many others, and he built on the work of many others who went before him and others who worked with him.

Essential Einstein reading....

It is inevitable that Albert Einstein's "private lives" will fall under the dissection knives of historians and biographers. There are already dozens of excellent biographies of Einstein on the market, ranging from the extremely scientific to the extremely personal. As the Einstein Papers Project continues to explore the personal correspondence of this remarkable scientist, we can expect the personal revelations to continue. Einstein, as were all great figures of history, was a very complicated person, and a very human one.In this work, the authors take a very personal look at his life between the high school years and the publication of special relativity. Specifically, it focuses on his first marriage, to Mileva Maric'. Much about this relationship was kept intentionally hidden for years by Einstein's secretary Helen Dukas, and scientist Otto Nathan, who became the de facto protectors of the "Einstein image." Since they had known him in the era of his marriage to his cousin Elsa, they understandably sought to minimize and downplay any factors from his younger years that might reflect negatively upon him, and a failed first marriage, with an illegitimate child, could certainly be seen as less than flattering.Highfield and Carter's book draws heavily on the work of the Einstein Papers scholars Stachel, Renn, and Schulmann. Einstein's voluminous correspondence from those years has shed much new light on such questions as the fate of the daughter Liseral, but without providing definitive answers. Considerable time is also spent on the issue of Mileva's role in the development of special relativity - topic that exploded with the force of a bomb in recent years.Einstein has been dead for nearly half a century now, and it is certain now that his private life will be subjected to as intense scrutiny as has special and general relativity. This book, along with Overbye's "Einstein in Love" take a respectful but straightforward approach. Any Einstein admirer or general fan of the history of science should read this book.
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