Albert Einstien

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Albert Einstien Page 3

by Anne Schraff


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  Albert Einstein referred to death as

  “the old debt” which all people must pay. He felt his time to pay the debt was close, but he did not want to stay in the hospital. When his son, Hans, came from California, Einstein assured him he was feeling better.

  Even while he lay in his hospital bed, Einstein asked that his latest pages of mathematical equations be brought to him so he might add something.

  In the very early hours of the morning of April 18, 1955, Einstein began mumbling in German. The nurse who was with him did not understand German so she could not tell anyone what Einstein’s last words were. He died before the next day dawned. The weakened artery had apparently burst.

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  Einstein had known for some time that he was dying and he made plans for it. He wanted no funeral, no grave, and no monument. Albert Einstein was not a religious man. He believed the universe was so awesome that it had to have been created by a supreme intelligence. His name for this creator was “the old gentleman.”

  Einstein wanted his body cremated with the ashes disposed of secretly. He felt his work was the important thing about his life, and he did not want his earthly remains to be the center of attention.

  He did permit his brain to be removed during an autopsy. Scientists wanted to discover if there was anything unusual about the brain of a genius. They did find that the part of Einstein’s brain associated with mathematical reasoning, 58

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  the inferior parietal, was fifteen percent wider on both sides than normal.

  Albert Einstein was considered to be one of the world’s rare geniuses, as Isaac Newton was in his time.

  Fame and popularity meant nothing to Einstein. In fact, they often distressed him. He had little use for wealth or material goods. He continued to be amazed that people needed so many things to make them happy. He was a humble, patient, and dedicated man.

  His joy was derived from observing nature and finding scientific truths.

  Time magazine voted Albert Einstein the person who made the most

  important contributions to the 20th century. Einstein himself would not have agreed. He always mourned the victims of the atomic bomb and feared a 59

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  future world war that might destroy the world he loved so much. In the end, Albert Einstein’s determination to work for human brotherhood and world peace was perhaps as important as his revolutionary ideas about space, matter, and time.

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  Albert Einstein is regarded by many as the most important scientist of the 20th century and the greatest physicist of all time.

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  B I B L I O G R A P H Y

  Abraham, Carolyn. Possessing Genius: The Bizarre Journey of Einstein's Brain. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2002.

  Kaku, Michio. Albert Einstein: How Albert Einstein’s Vision Transformed Our Understanding of Time and Space. New York: W.W. Norton, 2004.

  Overbye, Dennis. Einstein in Love: A Scientific Romance. New York: Viking, 2000.

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  G L O S S A R Y

  advocate: someone who supports or immensely: to a very large extent or speaks in favor of something

  degree

  Aryan: in Nazi ideology, a Manhattan Project: a project Caucasian, non-semitic person

  funded by the U.S. government

  considered to be superior to

  during World War II to develop others because of race

  the first atomic bomb

  autopsy: a medical examination of a molecule: the smallest part of a dead body in order to determine substance consisting of a single the cause or circumstances of

  set of atoms

  death

  optimistic: expressing a cheerful and barbaric: uncivilized , primitive, positive attitude about the future unusually cruel

  pacifism: a belief that violent ways Big Bang: a theory of the origin of of resolving disputes are

  the universe that says the

  unacceptable frequently because universe developed out of the

  of religious or moral principles explosion of a single extremely physics: the science of matter, dense mass of matter

  energy, force, and motion

  campus: the area of land that pondering: thinking about, contains the buildings and

  meditating on

  grounds of a university or college prestigious: important, prominent, casualties: people who are seriously distinguished

  injured or killed during combat symptom: indication, evidence or in an accident

  synagogue: the place of worship for communist: a supporter of a Jewish congregation

  communism, a system of

  verified: confirmed, proved government in which the state

  war bonds: a type of savings

  controls wealth, property, and bond issued by a government to the economy

  finance a war

  compass: a device for finding Zionist movement: the political and directions that uses a magnetized religious movement that

  pointer that indicates north

  advocated for a homeland for the diligently: industriously Jewish people in the biblical land discipline: the ability to act in a of Israel

  controlled and orderly manner

  embittered: disillusioned, resentful frail: weak, flimsy

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  I N D E X

  anti-semitism, 40

  Maric-Einstein, Mileva, 18,

  atomic bomb, 6, 47, 48

  23, 24, 31, 32, 33, 35, 39

  Bern, 22

  Munich, 7

  Brownian motion, 25

  Nagasaki, 49, 50

  cold war, 50

  Nazi Party, 44

  Columbia University, 43

  Newton, Isaac, 5

  E=mc2, 30

  Nobel Prize, 44

  Einstein Institute of

  patent office, 22

  Mathematics, 52

  Pearl Harbor, 48

  Einstein, Eduard, 32

  photon, 24

  Einstein, Elsa, 34, 35, 39, 46, Princeton Hospital, 57

  54

  Princeton University, 43

  Einstein, Hans Albert, 24, 40, Prussian Academy of Science,

  44, 58

  32

  Einstein, Hermann, 6,19

  Roosevelt, Franklin, 43, 47,

  Einstein, Maja, 7, 14, 44

  48, 49

  Einstein, Rudolf, 34

  Russia, 50

  Evolution of Physics, 47

  Swiss Federal Polytechnical

  Gandhi, Mahatma, 56

  Institute, 15

  German Annals of Physics,

  Theory of Relativity, 6, 26,

  20, 29

  38, 39

  Germany, 14, 33, 40, 44, 49

  Ulm, 6

  Grossman, Marcel, 18, 21, 22

  Unified Field Theory, 39

  Hebrew University, 43

  University of Berlin, 33

  Hiroshima, 49, 50

  University of Prague, 32

  Hitler, Adolf, 41, 46, 47, 48

  University of Zurich, 20,

  India, 56

  26, 32

  Israel, 53

  Weizmann, Chaim, 40, 53

  Italy, 15

  Winterthur, 20

  Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, 33

  World War I, 40

  Koch, Pauline, 6, 7

  World War II, 6, 49, 50

  Luitpold School, 13

  Zionist, 42

  Manhattan Project, 48

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  Document Outline

  Chapter 1 />
  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Glossary

  Index

 

 

 


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