The Year Of Albert Einstein
His dizzying discoveries in 1905 would forever change our understanding of the universe. Amid all the centennial hoopla, the trick is to separate the man from the math
- By Richard Panek
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 8)
Only then, 14 years after Einstein’s miracle year, did the range of Einstein’s accomplishments begin to become common knowledge. Because the public learned about special relativity and general relativity at the same time, says Weart, the cult of Einstein coalesced quickly. “And then came quantum theory, and people went back and said, ‘Oh, yeah, Einstein did that, too.’ ”
An accurate count of articles about Einstein around the world in 1919—that first year of fame—is probably impossible; an essay contest sponsored by Scientific American for the best explanation of relativity in layperson’s terms attracted entries from more than 20 countries. “I have been so swamped with questions, invitations, challenges,” Einstein wrote in a letter during this period, “that I dream that I am burning in Hell and that the postman is the Devil eternally roaring at me, throwing new bundles of letters at my head because I have not yet answered the old ones.”
And all this celebrity, British astronomer W.J.S. Lockyer remarked, was for discoveries that “do not personally concern ordinary human beings; only astronomers are affected.” The depth of the response could be due only to the historical moment—the aftermath of the Great War. “Here was something which captured the imagination,” wrote Leopold Infeld, a Polish physicist and future collaborator of Einstein’s: “human eyes looking from an earth covered with graves and blood to the heavens covered with the stars.”
To many, Einstein became a symbol of postwar rapprochement and a return to reason. As Eddington wrote to him less than a month after the eclipse announcement, “For scientific relations between England and Germany this is the best thing that could have happened.” Even today, that interpretation continues to resonate. “During that war when much of humanity devoted itself to senseless destruction,” Holton has said, Einstein “revealed the outlines of the grand construction of the universe. That must count as one of the most moral acts of that time.”
But some critics of relativity argued that Einstein was merely one more anarchist fueling the funeral pyres of civilization. A professor of celestial mechanics at Columbia University worried in the New York Times in November 1919 that the impulse to “throw aside the well-tested theories upon which have been built the entire structure of modern scientific and mechanical development” was of a piece with “the war, the strikes, the Bolshevist uprisings.”
Einstein’s own political leanings further complicated people’s responses to his work. Avisceral, lifelong anti-authoritarian, he had renounced his German citizenship at age 16 rather than subject himself to mandatory military service. Now, in the nascent WeimarRepublic, Einstein, a Jew, found himself portrayed as a villain by swastika-sporting German nationalists and as a hero by internationalists. “This world is a curious madhouse,” Einstein wrote a friend. “At present every coachman and every waiter argues about whether the relativity theory is correct. Aperson’s conviction on this point depends on the political party he belongs to.” The “arguments” soon descended into death threats, and Einstein briefly fled Germany for a speaking tour of Japan. After Hitler rose to power in 1933, Einstein abandoned Germany for good. He accepted an appointment to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where he lived in a modest house on Mercer Street until his death from a ruptured abdominal aneurysm at age 76 in April 1955.
Throughout his public years, Einstein embodied contradictions. A pacifist, he would advocate the construction of the atomic bomb. He argued for a world without borders, and campaigned for the establishment of the state of Israel—so much so that in 1952 he was invited to be its president. He was a genius, puttering absent-mindedly around his house in Princeton, and he was a joker, sticking out his tongue for a photographer. But it wasn’t simply these contradictions that distinguished him. It was their scale. They were all larger than life, and so therefore, the thinking went, must he be, too.
But he wasn’t, as he well knew. His first marriage had ended in divorce, a second, to a cousin, in her death, nearly two decades before his. He fathered one illegitimate daughter, who is thought to have been given up for adoption and is lost to history, and two sons, Hans Albert and Eduard. One of them, Eduard, suffered from schizophrenia. Hans Albert taught engineering at UC Berkeley. Yet somehow Einstein père became a myth among men.
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Comments (5)
Perception changes everything, which is why you're happy with the paint you bought from Home Depot until you bring it home to your house. But seriously, in many, many years the universe will continue to expand, stars will collapse, black hole-ify, suck in all matter around them, eventually black holes, or 'anti-matter' (matter too dense for light to escape it) will overtake matter, our universe will collapse upon itself, all the anti-matter will explode! Rinse, repeat. That's our existence.
Posted by Phil E. Drifter on June 9,2012 | 05:40 AM
everyone should realized that the smartest man of the century would never be hired by todays corporate genius, tells us a lot about how stupid our modern society really is.
Posted by Frankwest on June 13,2011 | 07:51 PM
i love einstein
Posted by Skd on October 14,2009 | 04:52 PM
The impossible is possible.Einstein made his discoveries because he did not put limits on his mind or reality.To accept quantum mechanics is limiting your scope, not to say its wrong but there must be more. I believe Einstein was right to be stubborn and not give up.Even though he didnt break it, he learned more everyday to bring us closer.
Posted by Roger Torres on July 16,2009 | 06:31 PM
I've been looking at some photos of Aarau and thinking what a beautiful place it is. In Switzerland you can walk around the streets without being swamped by other pedestrians. As for Einstein & the other prominent physicists I would merely say this: the way forward is with the mind, but that mind must be the one that can transcend physical reality. Only through that means of coming face to face with root causes may radical advances in physics occur that would presently seem unbelievable e.g. faster than light travel. Keep the faith because I believe that time to be soon.
Posted by Richard Warwick on July 4,2009 | 09:32 PM