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Einstein Unveiled

John_Renne writes "One of the most well known scientists in the near history is Albert Einstein. Pictures of him can be found on allmost everything varying from lunchboxes to t-shirts and cartoons. On the other hand there's little knowledge of who Einstein really was and the human being behind the genius. This article tries to create a view of the inner Einstein. A nice read for everyone interested in the person inside the phenomenon."

53 of 261 comments (clear)

  1. Finally by Xpilot · · Score: 5, Funny

    The topic matches the topic icon!

    Beautiful! This is truly a Slashdot moment to cherish.

    --
    "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
    1. Re:Finally by SkulkCU · · Score: 5, Funny


      This is truly a Slashdot moment to cherish.

      Well, don't worry -- it'll probably happen again.

      Very soon. *ahem* Sorry.

      --
      .sig last updated Jan. 14, 2000
    2. Re:Finally by einstein · · Score: 5, Funny

      I wish it was a better picture. I look so grumpy.
      --

    3. Re:Finally by jahalme · · Score: 3, Funny
      Do note this sentence from the article;

      "Albert Einstein remains not just scientifically relevant but a multipurpose icon as well."

      Yes indeed - he's used as the icon for all science stories on Slashdot. I'd definately call that multipurpose!

    4. Re:Finally by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

      The topic matches the topic icon!

      I don't see an icon. Why, it must be relative to the viewer.

  2. "unknown"? by cetan · · Score: 5, Funny

    On the other hand there's little knowledge of who Einstein really was and the human being behind the genius

    You mean, aside from all the biographys written about him, the published letters to his children, the secret FBI file kept about him, etc etc.

    BN returns rather a lot on the man, and a number of these items are not lunchboxes.
    http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/result s.asp?WRD=Einstein

    --
    In Soviet Russia...michael would be rotting in Siberia!
  3. Didn't he get his start... by TechnoLust · · Score: 4, Funny

    splitting beer atoms to make fizzy beer? You have to admire anyone who wants to make better beer. Oh, wait, that was just a movie. History, pop-culture, same difference. :-)

    --
    "Da ist ein Technölüst in mein Unterpanten!"
    1. Re:Didn't he get his start... by Peter+Trepan · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually:

      Ein = one

      Stein = beer mug

      Einstein = one beer mug?

      Anyone here speak fluent enough German to tell me whether this has significance?

      --

      Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.

  4. Related Book by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 3, Informative

    I recently bought a book at a library used book sale called Einstein: The Human Side. I'm not sure who it's written by, but it's basically a collection of letters that Einstein wrote to family, friends, and others. He personally responded to many of the letters written to him, and this book tends to capture the more humorous and touching ones.

    --
    You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
  5. The Einstein Scrapbook by KingAdrock · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Einstein Scrapbook is also a very good read on the life of Einstein. It is mostly just a printing of all of his personal papers/essays/letters that he left to be archived at The Hebrew University.

  6. Childrens Letters To Einstein by the_Upsetter · · Score: 5, Interesting
    A great amount of insight can be found in what children wrote to the man ...

    Some Highlights...

    Dear Dr. Einstein,

    I am a pupil in the sixth grade at Westview School. We have been talking about animals and plants in Science. There are a few children in our room that do not understand why people are classed as animals. I would appreciate it very much if you would please answer this and explain to me why people are classed as animals.

    Thanking you,
    Sincerely,
    Carol
    November 12, 1952

    The very thoughtful answer...

    Dear Children:

    We should not ask "What is an animal" but "what sort of thing do we call an animal?" Well, we call something an animal which has certain characteristics: it takes nourishment, it descends from parents similar to itself, it grows, it moves by itself, it dies if its time has run out. That's why we call the worms, the chicken, the dog, the monkey an animal. What about us humans? Think about it in the above mentioned way and then decide for yourselves whether it is a natural thing to regard ourselves as animals.

    With kind regards,
    Albert Einstein
    January 17, 1953
    1. Re:Childrens Letters To Einstein by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 3, Funny

      The genius of you Americans is that you never make clear-cut stupid moves, only complicated stupid moves...

      I resent this remark. I did at least five incredibly stupid things just yesterday. All of them were readily apparent to the most casual observer.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  7. LSD? by giel · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Einstein said that he thought in images and even muscular sensations," says John Stachel, a physicist and the founding editor of the Papers Project. "The hardest part for him was to translate his findings back into language that others could understand."

    Sounds like the good man was addicted to drugs. And yes, I can image it is really hard to translate an LSD trip into language others can understand. However a real artist will be able to do so.

    --
    giel.y contains 2 shift/reduce conflicts
    1. Re:LSD? by gowen · · Score: 3, Funny
      I can image it is really hard to translate an LSD trip into language others can understand. However a real artist will be able to do so.
      Or maybe not. Allow me to quote jambands.com
      As the story goes, the first time Paul McCartney got high, he discovered something very deep and mystic. He wrote it down on a piece of paper and folded it up, entrusting it to Mal Evans, the Beatles' road manager. The next day Mal asked Paul if he wanted to see what was written on the paper. Paul said "yes". He opened it up. Scrawled across it was the phrase "there are seven levels".
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:LSD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, not LSD. It's called autism. Albert Einstien was a high-functioning autistic savant. A common feature of the highly autistic mind is thought processes in music, sensations, pictures, written words, etc. Some autistics can also see music, taste sounds, hear pictures and the like... the sensors can become crosswired and overloaded.

      I perfectly understand what he means by finding translating his ideas into language as being the hardest part, as I'm in much the same position. I don't function in relation to words in the same way as neurotypical individuals do; my comprehension of meaning is far more abstract compared with what is normal; I don't as much conform my thinking to the subtlties and conotations (sp?) of the meanings of words used to describe or convey concepts.
      When an idea is in my mind, I can easily process relatively complicated concepts. But when I try to commit them to the written word, I run into difficulties because I am 'out of sync' with the standardised influences and meanings which are socially attached to words, and therefore the ideas which are conveyed with them.

    3. Re:LSD? by GigsVT · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dr. Albert Hofmann didn't synthesize LSD until 1938. Einstein was a very old man by then, and had already written many of his most famous works.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    4. Re:LSD? by BitHive · · Score: 5, Informative

      Woah there, you're mixing up autism (a mental disorder originating characterized by self-absorption, inability to interact socially, repetitive behavior, and language dysfunction) with synaesthesia (a condition in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another, as when the hearing of a sound produces the visualization of a color). While it is possible that Einstein was slightly autistic, savants are not usually as charismatic and witty as he seems to have been; the savant pays a huge price from other cognitive areas for their heightened ability in one area.

    5. Re:LSD? by VikingBerserker · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Einstein said that he thought in images and even muscular sensations," says John Stachel, a physicist and the founding editor of the Papers Project. "The hardest part for him was to translate his findings back into language that others could understand."

      I've been watching a lot of footage of Joe Cocker on stage, and if I understand his body language correctly, he can expound volumes on Stephen Hawking's latest theories.

    6. Re:LSD? by Xerithane · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, not LSD. It's called autism. Albert Einstien was a high-functioning autistic savant. A common feature of the highly autistic mind is thought processes in music, sensations, pictures, written words, etc. Some autistics can also see music, taste sounds, hear pictures and the like... the sensors can become crosswired and overloaded.

      I can tell you for certain that it is definitely not autism that triggers this. When I'm solving complex problems, I don't think in any language, or anything that could be understood by someone outside of my mind. For a long time I thought that was normal process.

      Sometimes writing it down helps me, but only so that I can see the individual points to any problem.

      A lot of people ask bilingual people, "What language do you think in?" The answer for a lot of people is none. Why put something into the constructs and rigidness of a language when you already know exactly what it is that you are going to think?

      As for what you wrote, I do not believe you are describing (or understanding of) Einstein's methodologies. He's not speaking purely of words, for math uses no words, in essence. Einstein was very well-spoken, and after he parsed the information out into an easier-understood form he could deliver with with eloquence. He believed children should be able to understand the most advanced concepts of the universe. He knew very well the subtleties and nuances of language, just read any of his papers, quotes, or speeches.

      Just because one chooses to solve problems without using the constructs of a language, or numbers, does not mean they are without capacity to do so. It is merely the more efficient approach for that individual. True genius does not come from the mind, but the minds presenter.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  8. Favorite Einstein quotes?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mine is "Imagination is more important than knowledge".

    In any case, I found this site a while back. It's somewhat of a tutorial on Einstein, allowing you to do "Easy" or "Advanced", and fairly informative.

    Theory of Relativity

    1. Re:Favorite Einstein quotes?? by simong_oz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      oooh, there are so many good Einstein quotes, but if I had to pick a favourite, I would probably go for:

      "Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour. Sit next to a pretty girl for an hour and it seems like a minute. Now that's relativity!"

      My other favourite would be:

      "The important thing is not to stop questioning."

      --
      "Because it's there." - George Mallory, when asked why he wanted to climb Mt Everest, March 18, 1923 (New York Times)
    2. Re:Favorite Einstein quotes?? by JofCoRe · · Score: 3, Funny

      Personally, my favorite Einstein quote is:

      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.

      ah... so true.

      --

      Place sig here.
  9. Re:"unknown"? Light article... by RyoSaeba · · Score: 5, Informative

    I read a book on Einstein's life (i think it may simply have been called 'Einstein').
    Well, the article forgets a whole lot of things, unless i have totally messed recollection of that book.

    First, they don't even tell us Einstein got a Nobel Prize... and not even for relativity itself ! IIRC, he got it for explaining some optical phenomena (dual particle / light nature of photons)
    Second, article forgets to tell that Israel did propose him to run for presidency there, which he declined.
    Third, the 1919 experiment actually had MESSED UP results (that was found later) !!! So it didn't confirm Einstein's theory... which, granted, was confirmed later.
    Fourth, Einstein introduced some constant in the relativity's equations so that the universe is static, which was his deep belief.

    And don't forget his fun quote: God doesn't play with dice (i do think it's from him)

    --
    Tsuyoikoto ha taisetsu da ne, dakedo namida mo hitsuyousa (Strength is an important thing, but tears too are necessary)
  10. Did you know by noz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The article doesn't mention that Einstein was a shocker at simple arithmatic. He had the natural genius to interpret large and complex equations, but was unable to perform simple calculations.

  11. Albert by joelwest · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ad hominem arguments never explain the 'how' of physicists just the 'who'. Still Einstein was a facinating man, but just as fascinating was Richard Feinman. I suggest reading about Feinman as well.

  12. Little known about Einstein ?? by tmark · · Score: 5, Interesting

    On the other hand there's little knowledge of who Einstein really was and the human being behind the genius.

    Please. As far as scientists go, there are none whose personality has been more revealed and documented than Einstein - except now, maybe John Nash. Lots of lay people know at least something about Einstein's personality; he's probably the only scientist ever who has been adopted by the media. By contrast, see if the lay people around you know anything about the personalities/loves/quirks of Darwin, Newton, Bohr or Freud.

    1. Re:Little known about Einstein ?? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 5, Funny

      Darwin liked turtles
      Newton liked apples
      Bohr liked bees
      Freud liked his mother

  13. Einstein on a bicycle by MacAndrew · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I went to grade school across the street from Cal Tech, and it was said that Einstein was often seen bicycling around on his 3-speed. Something about that lack of pretense has always charmed me, and I would think he is already one of the most human famous scientists. He spent much of the last 20 years of his life concerned with averting nuclear war.

    Einstein on a bicycle. And he didn't wear a helmet.

    1. Re:Einstein on a bicycle by crawling_chaos · · Score: 4, Informative
      I don't see how he could have been "often" seen at CalTech doing anything, since he spent the bulk of his time in the United States at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ. He did visit the left coast on occasion, and apparently the picture you cite was taken during one of those visits.

      There are some interesting memories of Einstein in John Archibald Wheeler's Geons, Black Holes, and Quantum Foam: A Life in Physics. Wheeler was also Feynman's thesis adviser.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
  14. exactly by tps12 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think current physicists would rather try to pass their work off as some sort of homage than to come right out and admit that they're chasing a pipe dream.

    Another thing that irks me is the whole idea of wanting to know what people like Einstein were "really like." This always results in a deluge of personal details, the publication of which is not only disrespectful of the dead but largely useless. I mean, he was a brilliant physicist: do I really need to read his poetry from when he was 15?

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:exactly by bay43270 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Another thing that irks me is the whole idea of wanting to know what people like Einstein were "really like." This always results in a deluge of personal details, the publication of which is not only disrespectful of the dead but largely useless. I mean, he was a brilliant physicist: do I really need to read his poetry from when he was 15?

      From a historical point of view, I think it IS important. People need to understand the nature of history makers such as Einstein (among others). It gives us perspective when dealing with events and history makers of today. If we don't address personality of historical figures, then we stand a good chance of loosing historically important information. If not, we may not let the next Einstein into a good college, or ignore his work because he is non-conventional or eccentric. How and Why are every bit as important as What, When and Where.
  15. A Good Biography by Ian_Bailey · · Score: 3, Informative

    One good biography I read on Einstein was Einstein in Love. It doesn't get to heavy into scientific details, but instead is full of rich descriptions of all the people and relationships in Einstein's troubled younger years, and the time leading up to his theories. A very entertaining and interesting read. It also touches on other famous Scientists of the day.

    1. Re:A Good Biography by Ian_Bailey · · Score: 3, Informative

      The book I mentioned does discuss this issue, and while I have nothing to use to prove its validity, the author gives the feeling that's it's much more complicated than just 'how much'.

      Mileva was involved at varying degrees throughout their realationship. She was at times (especially early on) heavily involved in development, doing calculations for Einstein and serving as a person to bounce ideas off of. However, both in the early stages of the idea forming in his head, and later on, Mileva was not involved at all. But she was definitely not just a muse.

      She also was hardly ignored because of her gender or race among her peers. Remember, this was during the time of Marie Curie and Serbia had a wealth of scholars.

      It seems as if she was forced to distance herself afterwards by the pressure from her family and her children, and the moving around with her husband (who was trying to make enough money to get by while the theory was being worked on).

      Well, I've rambled myself out. You may wish to read the book for a more detailed version of this. ;-)

  16. Re:"unknown"? Light article... by guybarr · · Score: 5, Informative

    First, they don't even tell us Einstein got a Nobel Prize... and not even for relativity itself ! IIRC, he got it for explaining some optical phenomena (dual particle / light nature of photons)

    Actually, the photoelectric effect was one of the basis of "old" QM and is well-deserving of a Nobel all by itself.

    In fact, A.E. deserved at least 3 seperate Nobels : photo-electric effect, SRT, GRT (in reverse order of importance) are all Nobel-worthy just by themselves.

    These are the ones I know of , very probably there are more.

    However since they never give the Nobel more than once, indeed the Nobel should have been given to relativity theory.

    --
    Working for necessity's mother.
  17. WMD by primus_sucks · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A committed socialist, he distrusted capitalism and communism in equal measure and believed that "world government" was the only way to control nuclear weapons and eventually abolish war entirely.

    Seems like Einstein would like to see UN weapons inspections for all countries. Personally I'd sleep better if all weapons of mass destruction were banned and all countries were subject to inspection. Let's not wait for millions of people to die before we consider this!

    1. Re:WMD by rogerz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I was waiting for a comment on this well-known aspect of Einstein's views. I credit the poster for implicitly acknowledging that this perspective is a matter of both his and Einstein's opinion, and does not deserve any special credence because of the source. This is important, as, in today's impoverished intellectual climate, people often reach to the source of a viewpoint in order to validate it, without considering the supporting arguments.

      In this area, Einstein was simply regurgitating a "sense" and "feeling" he had derived from powerful political/social forces which were in the air during his formative years. In his comments and writings on the subject, he shows no special grasp of the issues. Indeed, his naivity and lack of moral judgement are glaring.

      Einstein was a brilliant physicist, but this has no bearing on the validity of his politics.

      --
      If humans are mostly water, and beer is mostly water, then humans must be mostly beer.
  18. Re:"unknown"? Light article... by OldStash · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't forget his fun quote: God doesn't play with dice

    And don't forget this little uncertainty gem either:
    "A mouse cannot change the universe just by looking at it." -A.E.

    Or this beauty from his wife (Speaking with an astronomer boasting about his new telescope with which he "examines the workings of the universe"):
    "Really? My husband uses the back of an old envelope."

  19. Read more by tiltowait · · Score: 4, Informative

    A 2-page article is hardly going to make you a know-it-all on this man. It's a good overview, but please don't go away from it thinking you're an expert on his life. (That's just a pet peeve of mine, like people who saw a Ken Burns series and now think they're Civil War experts).

    What the article barely touches on, for example, is that (like Russell) he turned from science and philosophy to political activism later in life, complete with a heaping FBI file. Read his own words if you want to. There's also an interesting story about Einstein's brain!

  20. Einstein's Dreams by HoldmyCauls · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I just recently bought this book at a book sale. Very good, and the imagery is amazing. It documents Einstein's thoughts in novel form and interjects with meetings he had with his friend Besso, wherein he tried to explain his want for understanding.

    What made me cry the most was the realization that Einstein thought very much the way I did. If only people understood how simple -- yet dedicated -- true genius is, fewer people would be afraid of science and technology.

    --
    Emacs: for people who just never know when to :q!
  21. Re:"unknown"? Light article... by Dua · · Score: 3, Informative

    Fourth, Einstein introduced some constant in the relativity's equations so that the universe is static, which was his deep belief.

    This is the cosmological constant, which he later abandoned (I think because it was realised that the Universe is expanding - previously they didn't think it was). It's now thought that this constant, which is associated with the energy density of vacuum, is associated with the dark matter (the existence of which has recently been verified) which is slowing the expansion of the Universe.

    His abandoning of this idea is often called his greatest mistake.

  22. What Einstein WASN'T a genius at... by Theovon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One thing about Einstein that is often omitted is what he was intellectually bad at. Sure, we know he wasn't good at math, but an even more important point was that he couldn't memorize details to save his life. I remember reading a story about how he called the telephone operator from a pay phone to ask what his phone number and address were -- he couldn't remember them.

    Maybe that is a slight exaggeration, but not much of one, because this isn't unheard of. The crux of this boils down to this: One has only a certain amount of cognitive processing power; if the majority is dedicated to one particular type of reasoning, then others will suffer.

    So Einstein, as we know, was immensely brilliant at dealing with abstract ideas, but at the same time, he was also miserable at dealing with concrete things, like memorizing a bit of text or some numbers, or for that matter, being able to take in the full sensory experience of a walk in the park, without distraction from other ideas in his head.

    I do believe that he was certainly of above average intelligence, but it's important to realize that his total brainpower may not have been AS FAR beyond us as we are taught. As far as he was greater than us in abstract reasoning, he was equally lousy at many of the cognitive things that most people take for granted.

    In fact, Einstein was not a fluke or a freak of nature. There are other people like him in the world. They are rare, but they are otherwise normal humans. Rather than being brilliant at Physics, many are brilliant socially or amazing at understanding the thoughts and motivations of other people. Some of them are geeks.

    1. Re:What Einstein WASN'T a genius at... by Idarubicin · · Score: 4, Funny
      I remember reading a story about how he called the telephone operator from a pay phone to ask what his phone number and address were -- he couldn't remember them.

      Einstein never bothered to remember his own phone number, reasoning that he seldom needed to call himself. On rare occasions when he did, it was something he could look up.

      As a student in a co-op education program, I move every four months, so I can't remember my phone number either. It's nice to know I have something in common with Einstein. (Yes, I study physics too, but I'm not going to flatter myself.)

      With regard to famous mathematicians and physicists forgetting where they live, this joke has been told about many scientists.

      Scientist X is moving today. Since he knows how absent-minded he is, he takes care to jot down his new address on a slip of paper. He has an important lecture to deliver, so his family moves while he is in class during the day. When Scientist X prepares to go to his new home, he realizes that he cannot find the piece of paper. Distraught, he returns to his old house, and sees a young girl sitting on the front step. He asks her, "Excuse me, little girl. Can you tell me to where the family who used to live here has moved?"

      She immediately replies, "Of course, Daddy. Mom knew you'd forget, so she left me to remind you."

      A quick survey of the web shows that Scientist X is usually mathematician Norbert Weiner, though a number of others are cited less frequently.
      --
      ~Idarubicin
  23. Devout Jew? Believer? NOT! by ronys · · Score: 4, Informative

    "I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it."
    [from Albert Einstein - The Human Side,Selected and Edited by Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman, Princeton University Press, 1979]

    This certainly doesn't make Einstein a devout Jew - the Jewish religion is very much about a personal god. His god is the same as Spinoza's, and Spinoza was excommunicated by his fellow Jews.

    For more about Einstein and religion, see this.

    --
    Ubi dubium ibi libertas: Where there is doubt, there is freedom.
  24. Re:Repeat Nobel Winners by duct_tape_n_wd40 · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...and don't forget Linus Pauling (Chemistry '54, Peace '62)

    --
    .siggy .siggy .siggy .siggy hoi hoi hoi - Prosit!
  25. Re:"unknown"? Light article... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's also important to rememer that his quote, "God does not play dice," was famous, fun, and mostly wrong. That was his opinion on the study of quantum mechanics, which has its limitations, but is widely accepted and has predicted experimental outcomes.

    Einstein made a few interesting mistakes. That was one of them. Another was mucking up the theory of relativity when one of its implications was too incredible. Don't get me wrong. He was huge, and that is measured by the fact that he admitted his mistakes.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  26. I've got a letter from Einstein. by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 3, Funny

    My grandpa wrote Einstein a while back. Grandpa was leading a Great Books discussion on something of Einsteins, and he asked for a clarification of one of the problems in the book. Einstein wrote back. It's in English, which means he either dictated it, or someone translated it for him, since he didn't write in English.

    Either way, we're pretty sure he was wrong... hehe. Makes me happy every time I think about it.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  27. Re:Repeat Nobel Winners by reverse+flow+reactor · · Score: 5, Informative

    Marie Curie has also won two Nobel Prizes (Physics 1903, Chemistry 1911)

    Also, the Peace Prize granted to Pauling could have just as easily gone to Einstein, as they were both very active in ensuring that mankind did not nuke himself. Both were very strong advocates of peace. However, the noble prize is not awarded posthumorously.

    --

    The significant problems we face cannot be solved by the same level of thinking that created them. -Einstein

  28. Exhibit by Have+Blue · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is right now a huge exhibit on Einstein at the American Museum of Natural History in NYC. Worth checking out if you're in the area over the next few months.

  29. Re:"unknown"? Light article... by Asprin · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I always loved that quote, but when I was studying E&M and QM in college in the late 80's, I coined my own response:

    "God does not play dice." - Einstein

    "God may or may not play dice, but I'm pretty sure he doesn't use a pocket calculator." - G. Steve Arnold (me) c.1988

    My point was that the universe does not know equations -- it just is. The photons are not sitting there with QED books and Feynman diagrams trying to figure out what they are supposed to be doing next. Every bit of it is accounted for in itself quite automatically and the ultimate goal of the physics we do is not understanding, but only description. Understanding requires you to answer "why?", and that is beyond the scope of science.

    --
    "Lawyers are for sucks."
    - Doug McKenzie
  30. The God who plays with dices by kisak · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, Einstein never denied that Quantum Mechanics fits the known experimental data perfectly or claimed that further experiments would show that QM was wrong. Einstein was himself one of the founding fathers of QM and a master in using the predicting powers of the theory, predicting QM-phenomena like LASERs and Bose-Einstein condensation, decades before they were seen in any lab.

    What Einstein never accepted was the interpretation given to the mathematical framework of QM by Bohr, Heisenberg, Born and others. Einstein was not alone in resisting the philosophical/physical interpretation by the "Copenhagen school" , he was joined by people like Planck, Schroedinger, and de Broglie who all knew a bit about QM. (But as always, the old generation dies out and the new generation have gotten used to the new world view.)

    Einstein believed in a deterministic universe (just as Newton, Laplace and the other classic mechanics guys before), where when you knew the starting conditions perfectly, you could calculate what happened. This is how to understand the statement "God does not play with dices". "God" knows what is going to happen, He does not only know the odds are for something to happen. This is contrary to Bohr who claim that "God" (or the physicist) can only know the different possible outcomes from some given starting condition and the probability of the different outcomes. According to the uncertainty principle "God" can not even hope to know the starting conditions perfectly.

    The answer to QM by Einstein was the so-called "hidden variables" theory, variables that behave in a deterministic way but lead to behaviour that looks random in the experiments that were used to "prove" QM. Einstein also made famous thought experiments to show the inconsistency in the logic of the Copenhagen school, like the EPR paradox.

    Today most physicist believe Einsteins objections to QM has been shown to be wrong, and Bohr's interpretation has become the dogma. But who knows? Newton thought light consisted of particles, but was proven wrong. Then Einstein showed that light can be seen as both waves and photon-particles. So, maybe in some hundred years Einstein's objections to QM can be shown to be a "bit" correct :-).

    --

    --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

  31. Apparently by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 3, Funny

    Einstein: God does not play dice.

    Bohr: Don't tell God what to do!

  32. Re:Second that emotion! by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Interesting
    It looks like it's for a good cause but it's still a little IP scary:

    Welcome to the licensing web site for Albert Einstein(TM) whose beneficiary is The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

    Through a broad array of licensed partners, Dr. Albert Einstein continues to have one of the most recognized personas in the world. His likeness is used extensively on educational materials, collectibles, timepieces, apparel and posters. Microsoft, Texas Instruments, The Whitney Museum, The United States Department of Treasury and many others license products and services using Dr. Einstein. He regularly appears in advertising campaigns by leading companies such as Apple Computer, Arthur Anderson, NBC, Nestle, Nikon, Pepsi and The Store of Knowledge.

    Upon his death, Albert Einstein's estate (administered by the Albert Einstein Archives) was bequeathed to The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The Roger Richman Agency, Inc. in Beverly Hills, California is the exclusive worldwide representative for the University and is responsible for clearance of rights to utilize Einstein in advertising, merchandising and promotions. In addition, the Agency prevents the unauthorized use of the likeness and image of Albert Einstein.

    Should I ask if Slashdot has permission to use that picture or not?

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  33. they don't make Patent Clerks like they used to by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

    Einstein was a patent clerk when he published many of his greatest papers

    No wonder the current patent clerks are such idiots: God accidentally assigned all the brains to a *single* clerk. Probably forgot to increment an index pointer or something when dolling out the smarts to future patent clerks.