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         Einstein Albert:     more books (100)
  1. The Quotable Einstein by Albert Einstein, Alice Calaprice, 1996-09-16
  2. Einstein on Humanism (Volume 0) by Albert Einstein, 1998-08-18
  3. The Ultimate Quotable Einstein by Albert Einstein, 2010-10-31
  4. Albert Einstein (History Maker Bios) by Stephanie Sammartino McPherson, 2003-09
  5. In Albert's Shadow: The Life and Letters of Mileva Maric, Einstein's First Wife
  6. Relativity: Einstein's Theory of Spacetime, Time Dilation, Gravity and Cosmology by Albert Einstein, 2009-01-02
  7. Works of Albert Einstein by Albert Einstein, 2010-07-08
  8. Meaning of Relativity. Third Edition, Including the Generalized Theory of Gravitation by Albert Einstein, 1950
  9. The Einstein Reader by Albert Einstein, 2006-06-01
  10. The Meaning of Relativity: Fifth Edition: Including the Relativistic Theory of the Non-Symmetric Field (The Stafford Little Lectures of Princeton University, May 1921) by Albert Einstein, 1955
  11. Albert Einstein: A Biography by Milton Meltzer, 2007-10-30
  12. The Autobiography of Albert Einstein/Begins on Page 9 No Capitalization or Indentation by Gerhard Roth, Malcolm Green, 1993-03
  13. The Universe and Dr. Einstein by Lincoln Barnett, 2005-10-06
  14. The Murder of Albert Einstein by Todd Gitlin, 1994-02-01

81. Albert Einstein (extraits Du Livre La Planète Raison)
R flexion sur les implications de la th orie principale du physicien et sur sa d marche de savant, propos de l empirisme, de la logique et de la raison.
http://www.gillesguerin.com/philosophie/th/science/einstein.htm
Raison et Philosophie
La Planète Raison
Albert Einstein
Textes connexes
L'Empirisme
La Caverne de Platon Albert Einstein La « Vérité »
Albert Einstein, ses découvertes et leurs conséquences au plan philosophique
Albert Einstein ; la Relativité
Réflexion sur un exemple de vérité relative en physique

La découverte et l'emploi du raisonnement scientifique par Galilée est une des conquêtes et les plus importantes dans l'histoire de la pensée humaine et marque le début réel de la physique. Cette découverte nous a appris qu'il ne faut pas toujours se fier aux conclusions intuitives basées sur l'observation immédiate, car elles conduisent parfois à des fils conducteurs trompeurs.
La pensée humaine crée une image continuellement changeante du monde. La contribution fournie par Galilée a détruit la vue intuitive et l'a remplacée par une vue nouvelle. C'est là la signification de sa découverte.

« L'évolution des idées en physique » Albert Einstein / Léopold Infeld Petite Bibliothèque Payot 1978
Le problème fondamental de la pensée philosophique d'Einstein, autour duquel s'organisent ses propres analyses, est celui de la réalité du monde et de son intelligibilité, c'est-à-dire de la capacité de la pensée à le pénétrer, à s'en donner une représentation " vraie " (quoique provisoire), qui ne soit pas illusoire ou précaire.
"Einstein" de Michel Paty aux éditions " Les Belles Lettres " 1997
Albert Einstein ; la Relativité

82. Einstein Summary
Detailed, hyperlinked biography of Albert Einstein (1879-1955), from the Mactutor History of Mathematics Archive
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Einstein.html
Albert Einstein
Click the picture above
to see sixteen larger pictures Einstein contributed more than any other scientist to the modern vision of physical reality. His special and general theories of relativity are still regarded as the most satisfactory model of the large-scale universe that we have. Full MacTutor biography [Version for printing] List of References (365 books/articles) Some Quotations Mathematicians born in the same country Show birthplace location Additional Material in MacTutor
  • A meeting with Einstein
  • Ether and Relativity
  • Geometry and Experience
  • Obituary: The Times Honours awarded to Albert Einstein
    (Click below for those honoured in this way) Nobel Prize Fellow of the Royal Society LMS Honorary Member Royal Society Copley Medal ... Lunar features Crater Einstein Popular biographies list Number 13 Other Web sites
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica
  • Astroseti (A Spanish translation of this biography)
  • Princeton University Press
  • American Institute of Physics
  • Frankfurt (Einstein pictures)
  • Albert Einstein Online
  • Kevin Brown (Conquering the perihelion)
  • G Singh
  • Nobel prizes site (A biography of Einstein and his Nobel prize presentation speech)
  • Mathematical Genealogy Project Previous (Chronologically) Next Main Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Biographies index JOC/EFR © April 1997 The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Mathematicians/Einstein.html
  • 83. Albert Einstein And The Atomic Bomb
    Albert Einstein s role in the creation of the atomic bomb and his views on the a-bombing of Japan.
    http://www.doug-long.com/einstein.htm
    ALBERT EINSTEIN
    and the
    ATOMIC BOMB
    The physicist Albert Einstein did not directly participate in the invention of the atomic bomb. But as we shall see, he was instrumental in facilitating its development. In 1905, as part of his Special Theory of Relativity, he made the intriguing point that a large amount of energy could be released from a small amount of matter. This was expressed by the equation E=mc2 (energy = mass times the speed of light squared). The atomic bomb would clearly illustrate this principle. But bombs were not what Einstein had in mind when he published this equation. Indeed, he considered himself to be a pacifist. In 1929, he publicly declared that if a war broke out he would "unconditionally refuse to do war service, direct or indirect... regardless of how the cause of the war should be judged." (Ronald Clark, "Einstein: The Life and Times", pg. 428). His position would change in 1933, as the result of Adolf Hitler's ascent to power in Germany. While still promoting peace, Einstein no longer fit his previous self-description of being an "absolute pacifist". Research still proceeded slowly, because the invention of the atomic bomb seemed distant and unlikely, rather than a weapon that might be used in the current war. It was not until after the British MAUD Report was presented to FDR in October 1941 that a more accelerated pace was taken. This British document stated that an atomic bomb

    84. The Albert Einstein Archives At The Hebrew University Of Jerusalem - The Homepag
    The official homepage of the Albert Einstein Archives, the repository of the personal papers of Albert Einstein, the world-famous scientist, humanist and Jew and TIME s Person of the Century .
    http://www.albert-einstein.org
    The Albert Einstein Archives
    The Albert Einstein Archives at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem own the Literary Estate of Albert Einstein, as declared in his last will and testament. In this site you'll find information about Albert Einstein and the Albert Einstein Archives.
    If you are viewing this text, your browser lacks the ability to read frames. Don't worry, you can still enjoy our site. All the pages can be viewed from the contents page. Please come inside!
    Content

    85. The 2010 TIME 100 - TIME
    Collection of articles from Time Magazine portray Einstein as the greatest mind of the 20th century.
    http://www.time.com/time/time100/poc/magazine/albert_einstein5a.html

    86. The 2010 TIME 100 - TIME
    Article provides a glimpse into the life of the physicist who is considered the father of modern science. Includes sound file, photographs, timeline, slide show, and quiz. From Time Magazine.
    http://www.time.com/time/time100/scientist/profile/einstein.html

    87. My Saturday Afternoons With Albert Einstein
    Veteran journalist Ralph D. Gardner s intimate reminiscence of his childhood friendship with Albert Einstein.
    http://www.evesmag.com/einstein.htm
    My Saturday Afternoons with Albert Einstein By Ralph D. Gardner Courtesy of the Archives of the Institute for Advanced Study Albert Einstein in his office at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, 1954. Ralph Gardner, 12, on a bench in Washington Square Park, the year 1935 By Ralph D. Gardner Being only eleven at the time, I had no idea that the year I was introduced to Albert Einstein 1934 was among the most crucial in his life. During his visit to the United States, the Nazi government in Germany, where he was born in 1879, confiscated his property and revoked his citizenship. To Einstein, the most prominent scientist of this century and, at the time, an outspoken critic of Adolf Hitler, the German action was no surprise and, on receiving this news, Einstein accepted an offer to join the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where he remained until his death in 1955. During my own career in journalism here and abroad I met heads-of-state, military leaders, literary giants and entertainers, but I do not recall a more companionable gentleman than Albert Einstein. Perhaps I was invited to meet him because I could speak German, a result of living with my maternal grandparents. My grandmother and her family arrived from what was then Bohemia when she was an infant. Though English was spoken to others, they conversed in German among themselves. Daily, at mid-morning, the family gathered for coffee at my grandmother’s brownstone, and though little was said to me, I absorbed the language.

    88. New Details Emerge From The Einstein Files; How The F.B.I. Tracked His Phone Cal
    A recently released, partially censored version of Einstein s FBI file spells out how the bureau spied on Einstein and his associates and identifies some of the informants who said he was a spy.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/07/science/physical/07EINS.html
    • Home Page Today's Paper Video Most Popular ... Login Search All NYTimes.com Science COLLECTIONS
      New Details Emerge From the Einstein Files; How the F.B.I. Tracked His Phone Calls and His Trash
      By DENNIS OVERBYE Published: May 07, 2002 He was the Elvis of science. Women pursued him, celebrities sought him out, politicians courted him, and journalists followed him through the streets. But, as Einstein was well aware, there was a darker posse on his trail. For many years, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other agencies spied on him, acting on suspicions as disturbing as a tip that he had been a Russian spy in Berlin; as vague as an unease with his support of civil rights and pacifist and socialist causes; and as goofy as claims that he was working on a death ray or that he was heading a Communist conspiracy to take over Hollywood. The broad outlines of this history have been known since 1983, when Dr. Richard Alan Schwartz, a professor of English at Florida International University in Miami, obtained a censored version of Einstein's 1,427-page F.B.I. file and wrote about it in The Nation magazine. But now new details are emerging in ''The Einstein File: J. Edgar Hoover's Secret War Against the World's Most Famous Scientist,'' by Fred Jerome, who sued the government with the help of the Public Citizen Litigation Group to obtain a less censored version of the file. His book will be published this month.

    89. Why Socialism? Albert Einstein - Monthly Review
    The Monthly Review republishes Einstein s 1949 article Why Socialism. This article appeared in the Monthly Review s first issue.
    http://www.monthlyreview.org/598einst.htm
    Volume 50, Number 1 We place these articles at no charge on our website to serve all the people who cannot afford Monthly Review , or who cannot get access to it where they live. Many of our most devoted readers are outside of the United States. If you read our articles online and you can afford a subscription to our print edition, we would very much appreciate it if you would consider purchasing one. Please click here to subscribe Current Issue
    MR Webzine Site
    also of interest:
    Albert Einstein, Radical:

    A Political Profile

    by John J. Simon RECENT ESSAYS ON:
    Africa

    Asia

    Europe

    Globalization
    ...
    Imperial Ambition: An Interview with Noam Chomsky

    by David Barsamian The United States is a Leading Terrorist State Interview with Noam Chomsky U.S. Military Bases and Empire by The Editors Global Media, Neoliberalism, and Imperialism by Robert W. McChesney Anarchism and the Anti-Globalization Movement by Barbara Epstein Why Socialism? by Albert Einstein This essay was originally published in the first issue of Monthly Review (May 1949).

    90. Albert Einstein Home Page
    A student site about Albert Einstein. It includes biographical information, Einstein s letter to FDR, quotes, and a time line.
    http://www.humboldt1.com/~gralsto/einstein/einstein.html
    Welcome To The Albert Einstein Home Page A note about this site: I put information on this site that I thought would be useful to other students, but hopefully others will be able to get something out of it. "I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts; the rest are details." Albert Einstein SEARCH the Einstein Home Page
    Find: any terms all terms as a phrase Case: insensitive sensitive Introduction Early Life Scientific Works Later Life ... An Einstein Poem Personal Plug: My mom has just became a published author! If you're interested in a story of redemption in the Pacific Northwest, check out Some Things Are Obvious by Glory Ralston
    Interested in books about Einstein? Go to Amazon.com to look for them.
    Albert Einstein's World As I See It

    Albert Einstein's Ideas and Opinions

    Albert Einstein's The Meaning of Relativity

    This site is owned by
    Jesse Ralston. Want to join the Skip Prev Prev Next Skip Next ... List Sites People have accessed this page since 1-4-06 (I finally reset the counter) Get Your MBA Degree Today

    91. The 2010 TIME 100 - TIME
    Albert Einstein, Time Magazine s Person of the 20th Century. Links to information about Einstein and also information on the runners-up.
    http://www.time.com/time/time100/poc/home.html

    92. Albert Einstein: The Incorrigible Plagiarist
    Albert Einstein The Incorrigible Plagiarist a book by Christopher Bjerknes. Site contains exerts, table of contents and blurbs. Was Albert Einstein, in fact, a plagiarist, who copied the theories of Lorentz, Poincare, Gerber, and Hilbert?
    http://home.comcast.net/~xtxinc/einstein.htm
    Order Home Reviews Articles ...
    Anticipations of Einstein in the General Theory of Relativity
    Contact: info@xtxinc.com
    The name "Einstein" evokes images of genius, but was Albert Einstein, in fact, a plagiarist, who copied the theories of Lorentz, Poincare, Gerber, and Hilbert?
    A scholarly documentation of Albert Einstein's plagiarism of the theory of relativity, Albert Einstein: The Incorrigible Plagiarist discloses Einstein's method for manipulating credit for the work of his contemporaries, reprints the prior works he parroted, and demonstrates through formal logical argument that Albert Einstein could not have drawn the conclusions he drew without prior knowledge of the works he copied, but failed to reference. Numerous republished quotations from Einstein's contemporaries prove that they were aware of his plagiarism. The book includes 567 endnotes, countless references and an index. "As a matter of fact, reading this text should be a must for all people professionally interested in the history of Physics or of Science (for these readers the book, its "polemical" thesis notwithstanding, could become an indispensable tool, packed as it is with information, quotations, meticulous references, etc.), but it is highly recommended even to teachers, scientists of all kinds, philosophers, epistemologists, in general to every person interested in the evolution of human civilization and knowledge." Professor Umberto Bartocci in his review of

    93. Spacetime Wrinkles
    The National Center for Supercomputing Applications offers an online exhibit on black holes and Albert Einstein s theory of relativity, including images, video clips, and a bibliography.
    http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/NumRel/NumRelHome.html
    SPACETIME WRINKLES
    In 1905, Albert Einstein published his famous Special Theory of Relativity and overthrew commonsense assumptions about space and time. Relative to the observer, both are altered near the speed of light: distances appear to stretch; clocks tick more slowly. A decade and a year later, Einstein further challenged conventional wisdom by describing gravity as the warping of spacetime, not a force acting at a distance. Since then, Einstein's revolutionary insights have largely stood the test of time. One by one, his predictions have been borne out by experiment and observation. But it wasn't until much later that scientists accepted one of the most dramatic ramifications of Einstein's theory of gravitation: the existence of black holes from whose extreme gravity nothing, not even light, can escape. Major advances in computation are only now enabling scientists to simulate how black holes form, evolve, and interact. They're betting on powerful instruments now under construction to confirm that these exotic objects actually exist. You might like to take a two-minute video tour of this exhibit's contents. However, the Quicktime movie is rather large (12.3 MB!), so be patient when downloading. It could take several minutes. (Further information on downloading movies can be obtained from the

    94. English
    A list of the patents granted to Einstein and some of the original patent gazettes are presented.
    http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/~o-pat/english2.htm
    !!Einstein and his patents!! Extensions of the Golden Section and Fibonacci series
    We celebrate the centenary of the Einstein's universe in 2005.
    George Bernard Shaw once said "The Newton's universe has lasted 218 years. And I don't know how long the Einstein's universe will last."
    T he latter universe is being reinforced year by year.
    It is well known that Albert Einstein wrote papers about the theory of Relativity while working at the Patent Office in Bern, Switzerland. We have found that Einstein and his joint-inventors were granted many patents in some countries. Here is a part of the list of their patents. Full texts and drawings of some selected patents are also presented. 1.The list of Einstein's patents Year Patent No. Title of Invention Joint-inventor Switzerland Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Germany Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Kaeltemaschine Leo Szilard Kompressor Leo Szilard Elektromagnetische Vorrichtung zur Erzeugung einer oszillierenden Bewegung Leo Szilard Vorrichtung,insbesondere fur Schallwiedergabegeraute

    95. Physics Without Einstein A Centenary Review
    Work dwelling on the history of Physics in the 19th and 20th centuries; it introduces the foundations of the modern aether science as a viable alternative to Einstein s sterile relativity theory.
    http://www.aspden.org/books/pwecent/pwecent2005.pdf

    96. Mensch Einstein
    Es werden Informationen ber das Privatleben und das Werk als Physiker geboten. Au erdem gibt es eine Sammlung von Zitaten sowie von Ph nomenen und Maschinen, die ohne Einstein nicht existieren w rden.
    http://www.mensch-einstein.de/
    Sprungnavigation Direkt zum Inhalt. Direkt zu... Mythos EinsteinFragen Zitatmaschine - Biografie - Privat Werk Zeitgeschehen Virtuelle Ausstellung Einstein virtuell Besuchen Sie die virtuelle Ausstellung zum Einsteinjahr 2005>> Berlin - Caputh - Potsdam
    Erkunden Sie spannende Aspekte seines Privatlebens und seiner Theorien.
    AUSSTELLUNG
    KONTAKT IMPRESSUM ... HILFE

    97. Einsteins Erben: Informationen Ueber Einsteins Theorien - Einfuehrung In Die Rel
    Informationen ber Einsteins spezielle und allgemeine Relativit tstheorie und andere wissenschaftliche Gebiete Quantenmechanik, Elektrodynamik, Mechanik, Thermodynamik.
    http://www.einsteins-erben.de/

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