This document provides background information on Albert Einstein and the state of physics prior to his revolutionary work. It discusses that in the late 19th century, Newtonian mechanics and concepts of space, time, mass and energy had been the dominant theories for nearly 300 years. However, in 1905 an unknown 26-year-old clerk named Albert Einstein published a paper that introduced relativity and radically transformed these concepts. The document then provides context on scientific developments leading up to Einstein, including Galileo's work on motion and inertia, and Newton's formulation of the laws of motion and establishment of modern physics. It describes some basic principles of relativity, such as the concept of reference frames and Galilean transformations.
The special theory of relativity proposed in 1905 by Einstein describes how measurements of time, space, and phenomena appear different in reference frames moving at constant velocity relative to each other. Unlike Newtonian mechanics, special relativity is not restricted to a particular type of phenomenon and instead affects all fundamental physical theories. The theory of relativity led to profound changes in how we perceive space and time, showing that measurements are not the same in different reference frames moving relative to one another.
The special theory of relativity proposed in 1905 by Einstein describes how measurements of time, space, and phenomena appear different in reference frames moving at constant velocity relative to each other. Unlike Newtonian mechanics, special relativity is not restricted to a particular type of phenomenon and instead affects all fundamental physical theories. The theory of relativity led to profound changes in how we perceive space and time, showing that measurements are not the same in different reference frames moving relative to one another.
General relativity is Einstein's theory of gravitation published in 1915. It explains gravitational phenomena by describing how spacetime is curved by mass and energy. Some key points:
- General relativity superseded Newton's theory of gravity and describes gravity not as a force but as a curvature of spacetime.
- Einstein made several predictions with general relativity including the bending of starlight and gravitational time dilation, which have all been confirmed by observations.
- Tests of general relativity include measuring the precession of Mercury's orbit, the deflection of starlight near the sun, and gravitational redshift of light escaping gravitational fields.
Physics plays an important role in soccer. Kinetic and potential energy allow players to kick the ball with force and accuracy. The physics of projectile motion determines how far and where the ball will go when kicked. Friction between shoes and the ground enables players to change direction quickly and stop or start with precision. Understanding physics can help soccer players improve their skills and performance.
The document provides an overview of the development of physics and chemistry from ancient times through the 18th century. It discusses Aristotle's theories of motion and causation and how teleological reasoning was later rejected. Key figures discussed include Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, Newton, Boyle, Priestley, Lavoisier, and Dalton. Major topics covered include the discovery of gases like oxygen and hydrogen, developments in astronomy, formulations of gravity, gas laws, and the kinetic theory of gases.
hello, friends it time for new scientific consideration ,usually what we think how time pass away,,,,,,,,,o come on i wish to get back in past...also in future......what you say???...take a look........
The essential strength of the science of physics lies in the depth of its conceptual schemes, in the relatively few principles that to unify a broad range of knowledge about the physical universe.
One foundation of this knowledge comes from Isaac Newton and those on whom he based his work. These scientists not only solved an important problem in the field of dynamics, they laid the groundwork for the thought processes involved in solving these problems.
The document discusses Einstein's theory of special and general relativity. It explains that special relativity applies to inertial reference frames with constant velocity, while general relativity describes how mass warps spacetime and affects motion. An example is given of how the laws of motion are the same on an airplane moving at constant velocity as on the ground. The document then discusses how general relativity explains Mercury's shifting orbit due to the sun's gravitational field warping spacetime.
The special theory of relativity proposed in 1905 by Einstein describes how measurements of time, space, and phenomena appear different in reference frames moving at constant velocity relative to each other. Unlike Newtonian mechanics, special relativity is not restricted to a particular type of phenomenon and instead affects all fundamental physical theories. The theory of relativity led to profound changes in how we perceive space and time, showing that measurements are not the same in different reference frames moving relative to one another.
The special theory of relativity proposed in 1905 by Einstein describes how measurements of time, space, and phenomena appear different in reference frames moving at constant velocity relative to each other. Unlike Newtonian mechanics, special relativity is not restricted to a particular type of phenomenon and instead affects all fundamental physical theories. The theory of relativity led to profound changes in how we perceive space and time, showing that measurements are not the same in different reference frames moving relative to one another.
General relativity is Einstein's theory of gravitation published in 1915. It explains gravitational phenomena by describing how spacetime is curved by mass and energy. Some key points:
- General relativity superseded Newton's theory of gravity and describes gravity not as a force but as a curvature of spacetime.
- Einstein made several predictions with general relativity including the bending of starlight and gravitational time dilation, which have all been confirmed by observations.
- Tests of general relativity include measuring the precession of Mercury's orbit, the deflection of starlight near the sun, and gravitational redshift of light escaping gravitational fields.
Physics plays an important role in soccer. Kinetic and potential energy allow players to kick the ball with force and accuracy. The physics of projectile motion determines how far and where the ball will go when kicked. Friction between shoes and the ground enables players to change direction quickly and stop or start with precision. Understanding physics can help soccer players improve their skills and performance.
The document provides an overview of the development of physics and chemistry from ancient times through the 18th century. It discusses Aristotle's theories of motion and causation and how teleological reasoning was later rejected. Key figures discussed include Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, Newton, Boyle, Priestley, Lavoisier, and Dalton. Major topics covered include the discovery of gases like oxygen and hydrogen, developments in astronomy, formulations of gravity, gas laws, and the kinetic theory of gases.
hello, friends it time for new scientific consideration ,usually what we think how time pass away,,,,,,,,,o come on i wish to get back in past...also in future......what you say???...take a look........
The essential strength of the science of physics lies in the depth of its conceptual schemes, in the relatively few principles that to unify a broad range of knowledge about the physical universe.
One foundation of this knowledge comes from Isaac Newton and those on whom he based his work. These scientists not only solved an important problem in the field of dynamics, they laid the groundwork for the thought processes involved in solving these problems.
The document discusses Einstein's theory of special and general relativity. It explains that special relativity applies to inertial reference frames with constant velocity, while general relativity describes how mass warps spacetime and affects motion. An example is given of how the laws of motion are the same on an airplane moving at constant velocity as on the ground. The document then discusses how general relativity explains Mercury's shifting orbit due to the sun's gravitational field warping spacetime.
This article aims to present possible strategies for humanity to seek its survival with the end of the Universe in which we live. Research on the fate of our Universe, on the existence or not of multiverse or parallel universes and on the development of the final theory or theory of everything, that is, of the theory of the unified field, are important questions to elucidate in order to point out possible strategies for humanity seeks its survival with the end of the Universe in which we live.
Introduction to Special theory of relativityROHIT PANJABI
This document provides an introduction to Einstein's special theory of relativity. It discusses key concepts like Galilean transformations, Michelson-Morley experiment, postulates of relativity, and consequences like time dilation and length contraction. The document explains that special relativity applies to observers in uniform motion and the speed of light in a vacuum is the same for all observers, regardless of their motion. It also presents the Lorentz transformations and equations for time dilation and length contraction.
What are the basics behind the General Relativity?
General Relativity actually deals with gravitational interaction between objects. It thus deals with the rules that govern the giant universe and the galaxies within.
The Scientific Revolution occurred between 1540-1690 and marked a change in both science and thought. Key figures like Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton challenged the existing geocentric view of the universe and developed the scientific method. Their work established a heliocentric model of the solar system and formulated laws of motion and universal gravitation. This revolution shifted views on the relationship between science and religion and had wide-ranging impacts on how people understood the natural world.
The document discusses the history of models of the solar system from ancient Greece to the 17th century. It describes Aristotle's geocentric model and how Ptolemy later convinced people of a geocentric universe using math and charts. Copernicus first proposed a heliocentric model, which Galileo later provided evidence for using a telescope. Kepler developed laws of planetary motion and established elliptical orbits. Finally, Newton explained gravity and formulated the law of universal gravitation.
1. John Couch Adams and Urbain J. J. Le Verrier shared credit for discovering the planet Neptune by using mathematical calculations based on Newtonian gravity to predict its location based on perturbations in Uranus's orbit.
2. The discovery of Neptune was not a complete surprise as astronomers had long suspected another planet existed due to irregularities in Uranus's motion.
3. This was a major achievement that demonstrated the power of combining detailed observations with Newton's theory of gravity to discover unseen celestial objects.
This document provides an overview of the universe including:
- It describes the universe as everything that physically exists including space, time, matter, energy and the laws that govern them.
- The age of the observable universe is estimated to be around 13.73 billion years based on observations of the cosmic microwave background.
- The prevailing scientific model is the Big Bang theory which states that the universe expanded from an extremely hot and dense initial state around 13.7 billion years ago.
How did our understanding of gravity change overlprohaska
Our understanding of gravity has changed significantly over time. Early Greek philosophers like Aristotle believed objects fell because their natural place was on the ground. Galileo later found that all objects accelerate at the same rate in a vacuum and rejected Aristotelian physics. Isaac Newton then proposed his law of universal gravitation, describing gravity mathematically and applying it to both Earthly and celestial motions. While Newton accurately described gravitational effects, modern physics has since shown his laws break down at very high speeds, where Einstein's theory of relativity is needed to fully explain observations.
Newton made groundbreaking discoveries in mathematics, optics, and mechanics and formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation. He developed calculus independently of Leibniz, though priority disputes arose later. Newton's Principia mathematically described and proved the motion of orbiting bodies, revolutionizing astronomy and physics. His work was foundational in establishing modern science based on experimentation and mathematics rather than metaphysics.
Absolute truth is conceptualized with reference to meaning and procedure, within the limits of self-containment, which is a characteristic feature that is shared commonly between the universe, humans, and the institutions that they establish in society; and the human intellect is presented as being endowed with the capacity to appreciate it, given the appropriate environment
1) Prior to the Scientific Revolution, most Europeans believed in the geocentric model that the Earth was at the center of the universe.
2) Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo and Newton helped establish the heliocentric model through observations, experiments, and mathematical laws.
3) The Scientific Revolution established the modern scientific method and fundamentally changed how people understood the universe.
This chapter discusses the scientific discoveries that revealed the Earth is not at the center of the universe, including Copernicus's argument that planets orbit the Sun. It describes how Kepler determined planetary orbits depend on Tycho Brahe's observations, and how Newton formulated the law of gravity to explain why planets remain in orbit. The scientific method is used to develop theories through observation, hypothesis, prediction, testing, modification and simplification.
This document provides an overview of Einstein's special and general theories of relativity. It begins by explaining how special relativity resolved the conflict between Newtonian mechanics and Maxwell’s electromagnetic theory by establishing that the speed of light is constant in all reference frames. It then describes the key postulates of special relativity, including that the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames and that the speed of light in a vacuum is independent of the motion of the light source. This leads to effects like time dilation and length contraction. The document also provides an introduction to general relativity and how it addresses accelerated motion and gravity through the equivalence of mass and energy.
The Scientific Revolution emerged between 1500-1700 as a new way of gaining knowledge about the world through reason and observation, challenging prior reliance on religious teachings and classical thinkers like Aristotle. Key developments included Copernicus proposing the sun-centered model of the solar system, Galileo using experimentation to disprove Aristotle's theories of motion, and Newton discovering the law of gravity. The Scientific Revolution established the scientific method as the standard approach in science.
The document discusses the history of ideas around motion and what causes objects to move. It describes the views of ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle, who observed motion in daily life but lacked modern scientific instruments. Aristotle believed celestial motion was caused by angels or gods, and that objects on Earth required a continuous force to move. The document also discusses how Aristotle's ideas influenced later medieval conceptions of motion and were revived during the Renaissance.
1) Kepler's laws describe planetary orbits as ellipses with the Sun at one focus, with planets sweeping out equal areas in equal time intervals, and having orbital periods related to semimajor axes.
2) Newton's laws of motion and universal law of gravitation established that gravity keeps planets in orbit, with gravitational force proportional to product of masses and inverse to square of distance between objects.
3) Orbits in the solar system include planets following nearly circular orbits around the Sun, asteroids in the belt between Mars and Jupiter, and comets following highly eccentric orbits.
Arthur Young developed a philosophy called the "Reflexive Universe" that sought to integrate human consciousness with science. He proposed a model of the universe as a seven-stage process based on a torus topology. In this model, each stage has increasing freedom and asymmetry, from molecules to light. Young believed this model provided a framework for understanding the relationship between parts and the whole of the universe.
The document discusses Albert Einstein's theories of special and general relativity. Special relativity introduced concepts like the constancy of the speed of light and reference frames. General relativity holds that gravity is not a force but a consequence of objects warping the geometry of spacetime. It predicts phenomena like light deflection near massive objects and gravitational time dilation, which were later confirmed. The document also provides background on the Michelson-Morley experiment and quotes from Einstein and Hawking about the implications of relativity theory.
This document discusses the progression of ideas in astronomy from ancient Greek thinkers to Isaac Newton. It describes the models proposed by Claudius Ptolemy, Nicolaus Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler, and Galileo Galilei. Kepler discovered the elliptical orbits of planets and his three laws of planetary motion. Newton then proposed his law of universal gravitation to explain what causes planets to remain in orbit. By the late 1600s, it had been established that the Sun is at the center of the solar system and that planets move according to the principles of inertia and gravitation.
How To Write A 200 Word Essay About Myself In 202Tiffany Daniels
The document discusses the creation and effects of the Berlin Wall. It was built in 1961 by East German leaders to prevent East Berlin citizens from fleeing to West Berlin. The wall divided the city and was 155km long, with armed guards and death strips. It had profound effects on Berlin, separating families and friends and stunting economic growth in East Berlin. Over time, the wall became a symbol of the Cold War and the suppression of freedom by the Soviet bloc.
Writing A Science Essay - Wondering How To Write ATiffany Daniels
This document provides instructions for requesting an assignment writing service from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with valid email and password. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and select one based on qualifications. 4) Receive the paper and authorize payment if pleased. 5) Request revisions until fully satisfied, with a refund option for plagiarized content. The service aims to provide original, high-quality assignments through an online bidding system.
This article aims to present possible strategies for humanity to seek its survival with the end of the Universe in which we live. Research on the fate of our Universe, on the existence or not of multiverse or parallel universes and on the development of the final theory or theory of everything, that is, of the theory of the unified field, are important questions to elucidate in order to point out possible strategies for humanity seeks its survival with the end of the Universe in which we live.
Introduction to Special theory of relativityROHIT PANJABI
This document provides an introduction to Einstein's special theory of relativity. It discusses key concepts like Galilean transformations, Michelson-Morley experiment, postulates of relativity, and consequences like time dilation and length contraction. The document explains that special relativity applies to observers in uniform motion and the speed of light in a vacuum is the same for all observers, regardless of their motion. It also presents the Lorentz transformations and equations for time dilation and length contraction.
What are the basics behind the General Relativity?
General Relativity actually deals with gravitational interaction between objects. It thus deals with the rules that govern the giant universe and the galaxies within.
The Scientific Revolution occurred between 1540-1690 and marked a change in both science and thought. Key figures like Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton challenged the existing geocentric view of the universe and developed the scientific method. Their work established a heliocentric model of the solar system and formulated laws of motion and universal gravitation. This revolution shifted views on the relationship between science and religion and had wide-ranging impacts on how people understood the natural world.
The document discusses the history of models of the solar system from ancient Greece to the 17th century. It describes Aristotle's geocentric model and how Ptolemy later convinced people of a geocentric universe using math and charts. Copernicus first proposed a heliocentric model, which Galileo later provided evidence for using a telescope. Kepler developed laws of planetary motion and established elliptical orbits. Finally, Newton explained gravity and formulated the law of universal gravitation.
1. John Couch Adams and Urbain J. J. Le Verrier shared credit for discovering the planet Neptune by using mathematical calculations based on Newtonian gravity to predict its location based on perturbations in Uranus's orbit.
2. The discovery of Neptune was not a complete surprise as astronomers had long suspected another planet existed due to irregularities in Uranus's motion.
3. This was a major achievement that demonstrated the power of combining detailed observations with Newton's theory of gravity to discover unseen celestial objects.
This document provides an overview of the universe including:
- It describes the universe as everything that physically exists including space, time, matter, energy and the laws that govern them.
- The age of the observable universe is estimated to be around 13.73 billion years based on observations of the cosmic microwave background.
- The prevailing scientific model is the Big Bang theory which states that the universe expanded from an extremely hot and dense initial state around 13.7 billion years ago.
How did our understanding of gravity change overlprohaska
Our understanding of gravity has changed significantly over time. Early Greek philosophers like Aristotle believed objects fell because their natural place was on the ground. Galileo later found that all objects accelerate at the same rate in a vacuum and rejected Aristotelian physics. Isaac Newton then proposed his law of universal gravitation, describing gravity mathematically and applying it to both Earthly and celestial motions. While Newton accurately described gravitational effects, modern physics has since shown his laws break down at very high speeds, where Einstein's theory of relativity is needed to fully explain observations.
Newton made groundbreaking discoveries in mathematics, optics, and mechanics and formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation. He developed calculus independently of Leibniz, though priority disputes arose later. Newton's Principia mathematically described and proved the motion of orbiting bodies, revolutionizing astronomy and physics. His work was foundational in establishing modern science based on experimentation and mathematics rather than metaphysics.
Absolute truth is conceptualized with reference to meaning and procedure, within the limits of self-containment, which is a characteristic feature that is shared commonly between the universe, humans, and the institutions that they establish in society; and the human intellect is presented as being endowed with the capacity to appreciate it, given the appropriate environment
1) Prior to the Scientific Revolution, most Europeans believed in the geocentric model that the Earth was at the center of the universe.
2) Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo and Newton helped establish the heliocentric model through observations, experiments, and mathematical laws.
3) The Scientific Revolution established the modern scientific method and fundamentally changed how people understood the universe.
This chapter discusses the scientific discoveries that revealed the Earth is not at the center of the universe, including Copernicus's argument that planets orbit the Sun. It describes how Kepler determined planetary orbits depend on Tycho Brahe's observations, and how Newton formulated the law of gravity to explain why planets remain in orbit. The scientific method is used to develop theories through observation, hypothesis, prediction, testing, modification and simplification.
This document provides an overview of Einstein's special and general theories of relativity. It begins by explaining how special relativity resolved the conflict between Newtonian mechanics and Maxwell’s electromagnetic theory by establishing that the speed of light is constant in all reference frames. It then describes the key postulates of special relativity, including that the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames and that the speed of light in a vacuum is independent of the motion of the light source. This leads to effects like time dilation and length contraction. The document also provides an introduction to general relativity and how it addresses accelerated motion and gravity through the equivalence of mass and energy.
The Scientific Revolution emerged between 1500-1700 as a new way of gaining knowledge about the world through reason and observation, challenging prior reliance on religious teachings and classical thinkers like Aristotle. Key developments included Copernicus proposing the sun-centered model of the solar system, Galileo using experimentation to disprove Aristotle's theories of motion, and Newton discovering the law of gravity. The Scientific Revolution established the scientific method as the standard approach in science.
The document discusses the history of ideas around motion and what causes objects to move. It describes the views of ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle, who observed motion in daily life but lacked modern scientific instruments. Aristotle believed celestial motion was caused by angels or gods, and that objects on Earth required a continuous force to move. The document also discusses how Aristotle's ideas influenced later medieval conceptions of motion and were revived during the Renaissance.
1) Kepler's laws describe planetary orbits as ellipses with the Sun at one focus, with planets sweeping out equal areas in equal time intervals, and having orbital periods related to semimajor axes.
2) Newton's laws of motion and universal law of gravitation established that gravity keeps planets in orbit, with gravitational force proportional to product of masses and inverse to square of distance between objects.
3) Orbits in the solar system include planets following nearly circular orbits around the Sun, asteroids in the belt between Mars and Jupiter, and comets following highly eccentric orbits.
Arthur Young developed a philosophy called the "Reflexive Universe" that sought to integrate human consciousness with science. He proposed a model of the universe as a seven-stage process based on a torus topology. In this model, each stage has increasing freedom and asymmetry, from molecules to light. Young believed this model provided a framework for understanding the relationship between parts and the whole of the universe.
The document discusses Albert Einstein's theories of special and general relativity. Special relativity introduced concepts like the constancy of the speed of light and reference frames. General relativity holds that gravity is not a force but a consequence of objects warping the geometry of spacetime. It predicts phenomena like light deflection near massive objects and gravitational time dilation, which were later confirmed. The document also provides background on the Michelson-Morley experiment and quotes from Einstein and Hawking about the implications of relativity theory.
This document discusses the progression of ideas in astronomy from ancient Greek thinkers to Isaac Newton. It describes the models proposed by Claudius Ptolemy, Nicolaus Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler, and Galileo Galilei. Kepler discovered the elliptical orbits of planets and his three laws of planetary motion. Newton then proposed his law of universal gravitation to explain what causes planets to remain in orbit. By the late 1600s, it had been established that the Sun is at the center of the solar system and that planets move according to the principles of inertia and gravitation.
How To Write A 200 Word Essay About Myself In 202Tiffany Daniels
The document discusses the creation and effects of the Berlin Wall. It was built in 1961 by East German leaders to prevent East Berlin citizens from fleeing to West Berlin. The wall divided the city and was 155km long, with armed guards and death strips. It had profound effects on Berlin, separating families and friends and stunting economic growth in East Berlin. Over time, the wall became a symbol of the Cold War and the suppression of freedom by the Soviet bloc.
Writing A Science Essay - Wondering How To Write ATiffany Daniels
This document provides instructions for requesting an assignment writing service from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with valid email and password. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and select one based on qualifications. 4) Receive the paper and authorize payment if pleased. 5) Request revisions until fully satisfied, with a refund option for plagiarized content. The service aims to provide original, high-quality assignments through an online bidding system.
The document provides instructions for requesting and obtaining writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a refund option for plagiarized work. The summary focuses on outlining the key steps in the process for obtaining writing help.
001 Contractions In College Essays Worst Essay AdmissioTiffany Daniels
Here is a 193-word speech on spider phobias:
Good evening everyone. Today I want to talk about a very common phobia - the fear of spiders. Many people suffer from arachnophobia, which is an irrational fear of spiders. For someone with this phobia, even seeing a picture of a spider can cause a panic attack. Their fear is completely disproportionate to the actual threat or danger posed by spiders.
So where does this phobia come from? For many people, it stems from early childhood experiences of seeing a spider or being told scary stories about spiders. The small size and unusual appearance of spiders, with their long legs and hairy bodies, also creeps many people out. Additionally, some species
Sample Of An Expository Essay. Online assignment writing service.Tiffany Daniels
The passage discusses the rise of instant messaging as a form of communication. It has grown from a peer-to-peer service to being used widely on desktops, mobile devices, and phones, allowing communication from anywhere. While convenient, instant messaging lacks security features, putting sensitive company and personal information at risk. The passage advocates for more secure instant messaging options to protect users and businesses from potential hackers and cyberattacks.
Premium Photo Close Up Of Pencil Writing On A Paper - For Business ...Tiffany Daniels
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one. 4) Receive the paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions until fully satisfied, with a refund option for plagiarism.
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email; 2) Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline; 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications; 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment if satisfied; 5) Request revisions until fully satisfied, with the option of a refund for plagiarized work.
Academic Paper Writers Essay. Online assignment writing service.Tiffany Daniels
This document discusses the benefits of using printed badges for employees in retail environments. Printed badges can reduce costs associated with high employee turnover rates in the retail industry. They provide a professional, uniform appearance for all employees and can include important company branding information. Printed badges eliminate the need to reorder name tags when employees leave, saving money compared to other name tag options. Overall, printed badges present a low-cost solution for identifying staff while promoting a retail company's brand.
4 Great Personal Statement Examples And Why TheyTiffany Daniels
The document discusses the Book of Amos, which presents a holistic prophetic view of both corporate and individual moral, religious, and political responsibility in the Old Testament. It serves as a point of departure for social criticism. The Book of Amos comprehensively addresses moral, religious, and political issues through the prophet Amos and provides a foundation for social commentary in the Old Testament.
Example Of Independent Critique Essay Writing A LTiffany Daniels
This summary provides the key details from the document in 3 sentences:
The document discusses a young man named Allan who becomes an apprentice to a sorcerer named Rubin, hoping to learn magic. However, Rubin has Allan focus on manual labor and blacksmithing skills instead of magic. Over time, Allan grows impatient and doubts Rubin's training methods, questioning when he will learn actual sorcery.
This chapter discusses some of the earliest known architectural structures - huts dated to around 400,000 years ago discovered at the Terra Amata site in France. The huts were oblong structures measuring 8-12m by 4-5m, constructed from branches formed into roofs and walls. Evidence such as fireplaces and organized activity areas inside suggest they provided basic shelter and were used for cooking, tool-making and sleeping. The discovery of these early huts raises questions around whether certain simple shelter structures can be considered architectural archetypes that have endured and reappeared over hundreds of thousands of years of human civilization.
A Legal Analysis of the Service Directive 2006 123 EC and its impact in Euro ...Tiffany Daniels
The document provides an analysis of the impact of the 2006 Services Directive in the Euro zone. It begins with an introduction that outlines the purpose and structure of the paper. It then discusses the history and background of the Services Directive, including its aims to remove barriers to cross-border trade in services. The key sectors covered by the directive are also examined, such as retail, professional services, tourism, and education. Excluded sectors like healthcare, transport, and gambling are also noted. Finally, the legal basis of the directive in articles 3, 49 and 56 of the TFEU relating to free movement are reviewed as the foundation for establishing the single market in services across the EU.
A PROJECT REPORT ON quot Hotel Managment quot Using Php for Master Of Compu...Tiffany Daniels
This document is a project report for a hotel management system developed using PHP. It includes sections on the organizational profile of the company that developed the system, the software development methodology used, objectives of the project, system analysis, entity relationship diagram, system requirements, design, testing, and implementation. The project aims to introduce more user-friendliness in activities like record updating, maintenance, and searching for a hotel management system. It uses an object-oriented methodology and entity relationship modeling to develop the system.
This document provides an overview of the book "Algorithmic Puzzles" by Anany Levitin and Maria Levitin. It discusses what the book is about, the types of puzzles included, who the intended audience is, and what is covered in the tutorials. Some key points:
- The book contains 150 algorithmic puzzles of varying difficulty levels and is intended to both entertain puzzle lovers and promote algorithmic thinking skills.
- The puzzles cover a wide range of topics and illustrate different algorithm design strategies. Hints, solutions and comments are provided for all puzzles.
- The book will interest puzzle fans as well as those looking to improve algorithmic skills, such as students and job interviewees.
A Solution Manual and Notes for The Elements of Statistical Learning.pdfTiffany Daniels
The document provides notes and solutions for exercises from the book "The Elements of Statistical Learning". It summarizes the key concepts in statistical decision theory and linear regression models. It then works through the derivations of important equations from the book, including the bias-variance decomposition of mean squared error. The document aims to help readers understand difficult concepts from the book and improve their learning through working on exercises.
A rhizomatic edge-ucation searching for the ideal school through school t...Tiffany Daniels
This document outlines Alys Banner Mendus's doctoral thesis which uses an autoethnographic approach called "performative autoethnography" to explore alternative education models through the lens of her experiences visiting over 180 schools in 21 countries while living in a van, with the goal of better understanding education that educates "differently" even though her search for an "Ideal School" was ultimately unsuccessful.
This document provides a draft table of contents for the book "An Introduction to Information Retrieval" by Christopher Manning, Prabhakar Raghavan, and Hinrich Schütze. The book covers topics such as Boolean retrieval models, term vocabularies, index construction, scoring and weighting models, evaluation, query expansion, XML retrieval, probabilistic models, language models, text classification, clustering, and web search. The draft table of contents lists 18 chapters and their brief contents.
5th Generation Warfare and Issues of National Integration in Pakistan.pdfTiffany Daniels
This document summarizes a research paper about 5th generation warfare and issues of national integration in Pakistan. It discusses how anti-Pakistan forces use tools of 5th generation warfare like media and literature to sow divisions in Pakistani society and weaken national integration. They target ideology and security, dividing people along sectarian lines and spreading hate speech and extremism. This has undermined Pakistan's founding ideology and created religious conflicts. The document analyzes how these tactics have been used to attack Pakistan's ideology and create security issues since its independence.
The document outlines different types of written assignments, including essays, reports, reviews, case studies, and annotated bibliographies. It provides guidance on the structure and elements of each type. For essays, it discusses preparation, research, writing, and editing processes. Report structure includes sections like introduction, methods, findings, discussion, and conclusion. Different types of reports are also described such as technical, business, and lab reports. Reviews, case studies, and other assignments are similarly explained.
This document discusses cucumber cultivation practices. It begins by introducing cucumber as an important greenhouse crop and describing common varieties. It then discusses environmental factors like temperature, light, humidity and CO2 that influence cucumber growth. Key production principles covered include soil preparation, planting, trellising, irrigation, and fertilization. The document emphasizes maintaining optimal growing conditions and balanced fruit loads for high yields of quality cucumbers.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
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Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
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Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
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Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
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Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
BÀI TẬP BỔ TRỢ TIẾNG ANH 8 CẢ NĂM - GLOBAL SUCCESS - NĂM HỌC 2023-2024 (CÓ FI...
ALBERT EINSTEIN.pdf
1. ALBERT EINSTEIN
Dhruba Mukhopadhyay*
INTRODUCTION
A HUNDRED YEARS ago an article
with a modest title ‘Zur Elektrodynamik
bewegter Systeme’ (On the
Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies)
appeared in the sedate German Journal
Annalen der Physik. Its author was Albert
Einstein, an unknown young man of
twenty-six, coming from outside the
academic community, a mere clerk in the
Patent Office, Berne, Switzerland. Yet this
little paper brought about a revolution in
physics, overthrew the ideas on space,
time, mass and energy that had held sway
for nearly 300 hundred years since
Newton published his Principia. Einstein’s
name is to be ranked with those thinkers,
philosophers and scientists who have
brought about revolutionary changes in
human thought.
We know that scientific investigations
of mankind started with the very dawn of
civilization through the endeavour of man
to understand the natural phenomena, to
comprehend their laws and
comprehending them to act upon nature
for betterment of human lives. Much of
the history of early scientific activity of
man and of his early inventions are still
unknown to us. Thus we do not exactly
know how fire was invented, wheels were
invented, though these played vital roles
in the advancement of human civilization.
In many of the ancient civilizations, like
the Indian, Chinese, Egyptian and Greek
civilizations we notice that scientific
thinking attained high levels. But what
we journey from the 15th century. In the
*Prof. Mukhopadhyay was formerly in the faculty of
the Department of Geology, Kolkata University. He is
the President of the Breakthrough Science Society.
Middle Ages the spirit of scientific enquiry
was stifled because of religious
injunctions and stranglehold of the
religious institutions. In the 16th century,
going against the religious edicts,
Copernicus emphasized the importance of
observation and logical analysis for
arriving at truth. It was a first step in
bringing about a revolutionary change in
how man should look at the world. This
tradition of experiment, observation and
analysis was greatly advanced by Galileo
through his study of motion of bodies and
motion of stars and planets. Galileo’s
work was a big blow against religious
dogmatism and gave a tremendous boost
to scientific enquiry. Then came the era of
Newton, who collated all the observations
of his predecessors and went many steps
further. Clearly enunciating the laws of
motion, perfecting the mathematical tools
for scientific investigation, he built the
edifice of modern physical sciences on a
firm foundation. The 18th and 19th
centuries were the heydays of Newtonian
mechanics. In the 19th century the
Newtonian concept of particulate
existence of matter and its motion was
supplemented by the concept of field, the
existence of physical reality as a
continuum, through the researches of
Faraday, Maxwell, Hertz and others.
Copernicus, Galileo, Newton represent
milestones in the advancement of science.
Einstein is to be ranked with these giants
of science. The period from 1830 to 1930
was the golden age of physics. A host of
uncommonly talented scientists not only
advanced the frontiers of classical physics
but also brought in revolutionary new
concepts. The brightest star in the
firmament was Einstein. The scientific
thinking on matter, space, time that
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existed towards the end of the nineteenth
century based on two hundred years of
research after Newton underwent a radical
transformation as a result of Einstein’s
work. This was a type of change that the
historian of science Thomas Kuhn has
termed as a paradigm shift. Man’s idea of
the physical world acquired a new
dimension and physics entered the
modern age from the classical age. This
was, in the truest sense of the term, a
revolutionary transformation of human
thought about the external world. During
the last hundred years all the experiments
have proved beyond any doubt the truth
of Einstein’s Theory of Relativity.
Einstein’s place is in the front rank among
the scientists and philosophers of all ages.
Einstein was not just a front ranking
scientist; he was a great human being. His
contribution to the advancement of
human civilization is as much for his
science, as for his humanity, for his
recognition of social obligation, his
untiring effort for the betterment of
mankind and uplift of the downtrodden.
PHYSICS BEFORE EINSTEIN
The common man knows Einstein as the
propounder of the Theory of Relativity,
who formulated the celebrated equation, E
= mc2. Let us consider the main
propositions of the Theory of Relativity. All
of us gain some notions of relativity from
our life’s experience. For example, we all
know that when we talk of front and back,
or left and right, these words have
connotations only with respect to
particular things or persons. There is no
universal front direction or left direction.
Similarly, in ancient days, when man
thought that the world was flat, the
vertical direction at every point on the
earth was thought to be one and the
same, in other words, the “up” direction
pointed the same way at every place. Now
we know that the “up” direction in Kolkata
and that in Rio de Janeiro point to
different directions in space.
Physicists have discussed relativity
more precisely with reference to motion of
bodies. Man realized long ago that one
could describe the motion of a body only
with reference to its change of position
with respect to another body. Galileo first
put it as a scientific proposition that if an
observer is fixed to a moving body he will
not realize its motion. For example, when
we travel in a car we realize that we are
moving only by considering our position
with reference to an object on the ground.
If another car travel next to us with the
same speed and in the same direction, it
would appear to us that with respect to
the second car we are stationary. All of us
have experienced during our train journey
that when we are halting at a station, if
another train going the other way
standing on an adjacent platform starts
moving it appears to us that our train has
started its journey. In the language of
science we say that motion of a body is
change of its position in a reference frame
or coordinate system. In the particular
frame of reference in which we are
considering the body, its motion will have
a particular measure, a particular speed
and a particular direction of motion, but
with respect to another frame of reference
the motion of the same body would show
a different measure of motion, a different
speed and a different direction of motion.
Thus, when a person is travelling on a
train he will appear to be stationary to his
fellow traveler. But to an observer on the
ground the passenger would appear to
move with a certain velocity. To an
observer on the moon or on another
planet, the measure of motion of the
passenger would appear to be still
different. In scientific language we say
that in the frame of reference fixed to the
train the passenger is stationery, but with
respect to a frame of reference fixed to the
ground the passenger has a certain
velocity, and with respect to a frame of
Breakthrough, Vol. 11, No.1, March 2005 3
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reference fixed to the moon or another
planet he would have a different velocity.
Note that the three frames of reference are
moving with respect to one another.
If the velocity of a body is specified in a
particular coordinate system or frame of
reference, then its velocity in another
frame of reference or coordinate system
can be easily calculated through a set of
simple equations, provided we know the
velocity of one reference system relative to
the other. Let us consider a simple case,
where in a three-dimensional reference
system a body is moving with a velocity V
in the x direction. If initially the position
of the body is specified by the three
coordinates, xo, yo and zo, its coordinates
after a time t in that reference system
would be
x = xo + Vt ,
y = yo ,
z = zo .
If two reference systems were initially
coincident and then the second one
started moving with respect to the first
with a velocity v in the x direction, then
the coordinates of the body with respect to
the second reference system would be
x' = xo + (V – v) t ,
y' = yo ,
z' = zo .
In other words, the velocity of the body
in the second reference system is (V – v).
Such equations are known as Galilean
transformation equations. The concept of
relative velocity based on these ideas have
gone into school level texts now and the
students are easily solving the problems of
relative velocity.
On the basis of the experiments
conducted by Galileo, the Galilean
principle of relativity can be formulated as
stating that the laws of mechanics valid in
one frame of reference are equally valid in
another frame of reference if the latter has
a uniform rectilinear motion with respect
to the former. However, Galileo did not
express the relativity principle in this
language, though the essence was the
same. Such frames of reference which
move with uniform speed along a straight
line with respect to one another are
known as inertial frames of reference. All
the inertial frames have equal status; one
cannot be called better than or superior to
another in any way. If the velocity of a
body is 100 km per hour in a particular
direction in one frame of reference, its
velocity may be 200 km per hour in a
different direction in another frame of
reference. Both are equally true, one
cannot be called true and the other false.
Newton went far ahead of Galileo in
studying the motion of bodies and
coordinating all observations enunciated
the famous three laws of motion. In
Newtonian mechanics the Galilean
principle of relativity is fully recognized,
that is, the laws of motion are equally
valid in all inertial frames. If we throw a
ball upwards with a certain velocity from
the surface of the earth the ball will move
upwards along a straight line and after
reaching a certain height will start coming
down along the same straight line and will
reach the ground after a certain interval of
time. If the same ball is thrown upward
with the same velocity in a train that is
moving with uniform velocity, the observer
on the train will notice that the motion of
the ball is the same as stated before. It
will appear to him to have gone up and
down moving in a straight line and to
have reached the ground after the same
interval of time as before, but to an
observer on the ground the ball will have
appeared to have travelled on a parabolic
path. A corollary of Newton’s laws of
motion is that all inertial frames are
equally valid. There is no absolute frame
of reference, though we shall see later that
physicists tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to
define an absolute frame of reference. In
Newtonian mechanics there is nothing
called absolute rest, because from the
viewpoint of the laws of mechanics there
is no difference between rest and uniform
rectilinear motion. Similarly there is no
Breakthrough, Vol. 11, No.1, March 2005
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absolute motion, though Newton did try to
describe an example of absolute motion.
We shall not go into a discussion of
Newton’s example because it did not deal
with uniform rectilinear motion.
Motion of a body means the change in
its position in space over a certain length
of time. Hence, concepts of space and time
are closely linked with the concept of
motion. Newton recognized position to be
relative and motion to be relative in the
sense that both are dependent on the
choice of the frame of reference (see
Galilean transformation equations). Yet he
held on to the idea of absolute space and
absolute time and he also provided
definitions of them. “Absolute space in its
own nature, without regard to anything
external, remains always similar and
immovable. Relative space is some
movable dimension or measure of the
absolute spaces, which our senses
determine by its position to bodies, and
which is commonly taken for immovable
space…”1 Thus, absolute space exists
without relation to matter, without regard
to anything external. Space is thought of
as a receptacle filled with material bodies.
However, it must be mentioned that this
definition of absolute space lacks physical
meaning. Newton himself recognized that
absolute space does not come under the
observation of our senses and in solution
of real problems we apply only relative
concepts. In a similar vein, he wrote about
absolute time, “Absolute, true and
mathematical time, of itself, and from its
own nature, flows equably without
relation to anything external, and by
another name is called duration: relative,
apparent and common time, is some
sensible and external (whether accurate or
unequable) measure of duration by the
means of motion, which is commonly used
instead of true time; such as an hour, a
day, a month, a year.”1 Absolute time ever
flows unidirectionally from past to future,
and all events take place in this flowing
time. Like absolute space, absolute time is
in no way associated with matter.
Absolute space and absolute time would
exist even if there were no matter.
In Newtonian mechanics the position of
any point in a given frame of reference is
given by three numbers in three-
dimensional space. The numbers would
change if the frame of reference were
changed. However, the distance between
two points is invariant in the sense that it
does not depend on the choice of frame of
reference. Time also is not dependent on
the choice of frame of reference. Hence, in
classical relativity only the position of a
body is dependent on the frame of
reference, but the dimensions of a body as
well as the time interval between two
events are independent of the frame of
reference.
The conceptual frame of Newtonian
mechanics is built by combining the laws
of motion with the theory of gravitation.
According to Newton gravitational
attraction between two bodies involve
action at a distance and the force of
attraction acts instantaneously. Some
scientists felt uncomfortable with or were
even doubtful about this idea of
instantaneous action at a distance and
about the concepts of absolute space and
absolute time. But the spectacular
successes of Newtonian mechanics in
both practical and theoretical fields
banished all doubts about its veracity.
In Newtonian mechanics matter is
conceived as particles, micro or macro,
that is, it is portrayed as discrete
particulate matter. Later researches of
Faraday, Maxwell, Hertz and others led to
the development of the theory of field as
an independent physical form of matter
existing as a continuum. The scientists
recognized the existence of electrical,
magnetic and electromagnetic fields as
distinct entities extending over space.
Einstein placed great importance on the
development of the field concept and
commented that the “theory of relativity
arises from the field problems”. Faraday
Breakthrough, Vol. 11, No.1, March 2005 5
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not only unravelled the interconnection
between electrical and magnetic
phenomena, he also realized the link
between electromagnetic and optical
phenomena. Maxwell’s equations brought
to the fore the existence of electromagnetic
waves and showed that light can be
considered as electromagnetic waves. In
the words of Maxwell, “…… light itself…is
an electromagnetic disturbance in the
form of waves propagated through the
electromagnetic field according to
electromagnetic laws.”2
According to the ideas prevalent at the
time, if light is considered wave, a
medium is required for its propagation,
and thus arose the idea of the all-
pervasive luminiferous ether which is the
carrier of electromagnetic waves. The
ether was conceived as a stationary
medium and all moving bodies go through
this stationary medium. From the
philosophical point of view the idea of
stationary ether was very important
because it would provide an absolute
frame of reference, and thus absolute
space, and absolute rest and absolute
motion could be defined in this frame of
reference. However, many scientists were
not happy with the ether hypothesis,
because there is artificiality in it.
Moreover if it is to be the carrier of
electromagnetic waves it must have some
amazing and bizarre properties. The ether
hypothesis could provide satisfactory
explanations of some phenomena
observed in connection with the
propagation of light, but certain other
experimental data contradicted it. Finally,
the experiment of Michelson in 1881 and
of Michelson and Morley in 1887
conclusively proved the untenability of the
stationary ether hypothesis.
EINSTEIN AND RELATIVITY
All contradictions between the
phenomenon of light propagation and
ether hypothesis were resolved in 1905
with the publication of Einstein’s Special
Theory of Relativity. To arrive at this
theory Einstein made some postulates
based on experimental facts. These are:
1. All laws of nature are the same in all
inertial reference systems moving
uniformly in a straight line relative to
each other. Note that the only
difference between this postulate and
the Galilean principle of relativity is
that it speaks of “the laws of nature”
instead of “the laws of mechanics”.
Thus Einstein extends the relativity
principle to a much wider physical
domain. All the inertial systems have
equal status; none of them can be
called an absolute system.
2 The velocity of light in vacuum is the
same in all inertial frames and does
not depend on the motion of the
source or the observer.
The idea of ether is dispensed with.
Einstein wrote, “The introduction of
luminiferous ether will prove to be
superfluous inasmuch as the view to be
developed will not require an ‘absolute
stationary space’ provided with special
properties”. The Special Theory of
Relativity that he developed on these
simple postulates, which were firmly
rooted in experimental facts, could provide
a satisfactory explanation of all the
phenomena associated with the
propagation of light waves. But at the
same time he showed that if we accept
these, we have to radically change the
classical ideas of space, time, simultaneity
etc. That is why Einstein’s theory brought
about a revolutionary change, not only in
the domain of physics, but also on how
man thinks about space, time and the
external world. This is the revolutionary
significance of Einstein’s research.
Einstein showed that unlike in classical
mechanics time is also dependent on the
frame of reference. If two events appear to
be simultaneous in one frame of reference,
they might not be simultaneous in
another frame of reference. He illustrated
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this with a very simple example. Einstein
starts with defining simultaneity in the
following way. Two events taking place at
points A and B of an inertial reference
system are simultaneous if the light
signals (or any other signals of finite
velocity) sent from points A and B at the
instants of the events reach a point at the
middle of line AB at the same time. Let us
now imagine a train several million
kilometers long travelling with a uniform
velocity of about 250,000 km/sec.
Fig.1
Lightning strikes the front and rear ends
of the train and passes into the ground
(Fig. 1 A). We want to check whether the
lightning strikes were simultaneous or
not. An observer on the train would
conclude that the lightning strikes were
simultaneous if a detector placed exactly
at the middle of the train receives the two
light signals at precisely the same instant
(Fig. 1B). On the other hand an observer
on the ground would conclude that the
lightning strikes were simultaneous if the
light signals reach at precisely the same
instant a detector located exactly halfway
between the marks left by lightning on the
ground. Fig. 1B shows that the signals
reach the detector in the middle of the
train at the same instant and hence the
lightning strikes appear to be
simultaneous to an observer on the train.
But the light signals took some time to
reach the instrument and the train has
travelled some distance. Hence the
position of the detector is not at the
halfway point between the lightning marks
on the ground, but closer to the “front
mark”. Hence to an observer on the
ground the lightning strikes would not
appear to be simultaneous; he would say
that the rear of the train was struck by
lightning first. On the contrary if the
signals reach at the same instant a
detector closer to the rear of the train as
in Fig. 1C, it would appear to the observer
on the ground that the lightning strikes
were simultaneous, but to the observer on
the train the lightning would appear to
have hit the front first. This conclusion
that two events which appear to be
simultaneous in one frame of reference
are seen to have taken place at different
instants in another frame of reference
violates our common sense and goes
against the experience of our everyday life.
But according to the Special Theory of
Relativity this is the physical reality and
both the simultaneity and non-
simultaneity are real in the two frames of
reference. We cannot talk of simultaneity
without specifying the frame of reference.
We shall see later that these strange
phenomena become apparent only when
we travel at very high speeds comparable
to that of light.
Through such simple examples
Einstein also demonstrated that the
passage of time is also dependent on the
frame of reference. Let us think about a
passenger traveling by the Einstein train.
Let us assume that all the clocks in the
different stations are perfectly
synchronized.∗
A passenger boards the
train at a station after synchronizing his
watch with the station clock (Fig. 2A).
After traveling for an hour at a speed of
∗
Einstein had given a precisely defined procedure for
verifying the synchronization of clocks in an inertial
reference system.
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250,000 km/sec, when he arrives at the
next station he is surprised to find that
his watch is running slow with respect to
the station clock, though there is nothing
wrong with his watch (Fig. 2B). At the
third station he finds that his watch has
further slowed down (Fig. 2C). To the
passenger it would seem that if one hour
has elapsed according to the station
clocks, according to his watch less time
has elapsed. The greater the speed of the
train the greater is the time lag difference.
Fig.2
On the other hand, if an observer on
the station compares the station clock
with the clocks on the train as it flashes
by he would discover that the station
clock is behind. Einstein showed that
simple deductions from the basic
postulates of the Theory of Relativity prove
that each and every observer who is
motionless in relation to his clock will
notice that it is the other clocks moving
relative to him which are fast and the
clocks go faster as the rate of their motion
increases. Time passes more slowly in an
inertial reference system that is moving
with reference to another. This is not a
defect of the clock or a measurement
error; this is a fundamental law of nature.
The clocks in the two reference systems
give equally true measure of time valid for
that particular system.
We had mentioned earlier that in
Newtonian mechanics the distance
between two points or length of an object
is an invariant quantity, it does not
depend on the reference system. This is
not so in Einstein’s relativity. Let us
imagine a passenger boarding the Einstein
train with a 1 km ruler. The stationmaster
has also a ruler of the same length. As the
train gets a speed of 250,000 km/sec the
stationmaster would notice that the ruler
of the passenger is somewhat shorter than
his own ruler. And the passenger would
likewise see that compared to his ruler the
stationmaster’s ruler seems shorter. Let
us imagine that the Einstein train rushes
past a station platform which is 2,500,000
km long (in the reference system fixed to
the earth). The train travels from one end
of the platform to another in 10 seconds
according to the station clock. We have
already mentioned that if it is 10 seconds
by the Station clock it would be less, say 5
seconds, by the passenger’s clock. So the
passenger would conclude that the
platform is only 1,250,000 km long, that
is, the platform has contracted. By
applying similar logic it can be shown that
for the observer on the platform the train
would have appeared to be shortened.
Length is a relative quantity depending on
the reference system in which it is
measured. All moving bodies contract in
the direction of their motion. Of course
this motion has to be considered in a
particular reference system. This
contraction is not an optical illusion, but
an objective reality. However, there is no
absolute reference system in which the
length has a maximum “true” value,
relative to which there is a contraction in
length of a moving body.
In Newtonian mechanics time and
length are not dependent on the frame of
reference, but according to Einstein’s
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Theory of Relativity both time and length
are relative and depend on the frame of
reference. In Newtonian mechanics
Galilean transformation equations give the
relations between the space and time
coordinates in different inertial systems,
Similarly in relativistic mechanics Lorentz
transformation equations give the relation
between the space and time coordinates in
different inertial systems. The Galilean
and Lorenz transformations are:
Galilean Lorentz
vt
x
x −
=
'
2
2
1
'
c
v
vt
x
x
−
−
=
y
y =
' y
y =
'
z
z =
' z
z =
'
t
t =
'
2
2
2
1
'
'
c
v
x
c
v
t
t
−
−
=
where v is the velocity of one inertial
system relative to the other and c is the
velocity of light.
The equations show that when the
velocity v is very small compared to the
velocity of light (c), the Lorenz
transformation formulas turn into the
formulas of the Galilean transformation.
Only at velocities approaching that of light
the difference between relativistic
mechanics and Newtonian mechanics
becomes apparent. At commonly
encountered low and high velocities
Newtonian mechanics is applicable.
Einstein’s theory incorporates Newtonian
mechanics as a limiting case.
In Newtonian mechanics dimensions of
the bodies are invariant. Bodies occupy a
position in space, and time is independent
of space. According to Theory of Relativity
space and time are linked together to form
a space-time continuum. Events happen
in this continuum; each event has space
and time coordinates whose values
depend on the choice of reference system.
The dimensions of bodies are relative and
depend on the frame of reference, but the
space-time separation of events is
invariant and does not change in passing
from one inertial system to another.
Though for problems of everyday life it is
not necessary to apply the relativistic
formulations and Newtonian mechanics
provides more or less the correct answers,
from a philosophical point of view there is
a sharp and fundamental difference
between the two. Absolute time and
absolute space of Newtonian mechanics
have no place in relativistic mechanics.
Theory of Relativity reaffirms that space
and time do not exist independently of
matter. Existence of space and time
means existence of matter. This is a
fundamental law of nature ─ the objective
reality.
Another important proposition of the
Special Theory of Relativity relates to
mass and energy. In classical mechanics
the mass of a body does not depend on its
velocity. It remains the same in all inertial
systems irrespective of its velocity.
However, according to the Theory of
Relativity if a body has a certain mass
(rest mass) when it is stationary in any
inertial system, its mass will increase
when it starts moving with a velocity,
though the increase will be appreciable
only when the velocity approaches the
velocity of light. In classical mechanics
matter has mass, and energy has no
mass; from the viewpoint of physical
reality mass and energy represent two
distinct entities. Hence, in classical
mechanics, there are two separate laws,
conservation of mass and conservation of
energy. Einstein showed that mss and
energy are intimately linked together, and
his celebrated equation proclaims the
equivalence of mass and energy, .
What has mass has also energy, and
energy has mass associated with it. Thus,
philosophically it may be enunciated that
2
mc
E =
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matter encompasses both mass and
energy. Though in dialectical materialism
such a concept had already appeared on
the philosophical plane, Einstein’s
research scientifically established this
dialectical concept of matter.
Hundred years have passed since
Einstein propounded his Special Theory of
Relativity. Countless experimental results
have confirmed its propositions, and the
results of many complex experiments have
been elegantly explained by this theory.
Over these hundred years not a single
experimental result has contradicted the
Theory of Relativity.
In 1915 Einstein propounded the
General Theory of Relativity. Here he
discussed how the principle of relativity
operates in a non-inertial system; he
delved deep into the geometry of space-
time continuum, discussed the curvature
of the four dimensional continuum and
proposed a revolutionary new idea on
gravitation. A new vista was opened for
mankind’s conception of the universe.
Einstein’s theory laid the foundation of
modern cosmology. However, it is not
possible to discuss the General Theory of
Relativity without taking the help of
complex mathematical tools.
OTHER CONTRIBUTIONS OF EINSTEIN
Apart from relativity, Einstein made path-
breaking contribution in other fields too.
In the same year as the Special Theory of
Relativity, Einstein published a paper on
photo-electricity. Though Newton had
proposed the corpuscular theory of light,
by the end of the nineteenth century the
physicists had come to generally accept
the wave theory of light. In 1900 Planck
had proposed the theory of light quanta as
a hypothesis to explain the observed
character of radiation from a black body.
Einstein supported the theory and showed
that if we assume light to have a discrete
character not just when radiated but also
when absorbed by a substance and when
propagating through space, then one has
a very natural explanation of the
phenomenon of photo-electricity. In his
own words, “Light…is not propagated
continuously over an increasingly greater
space, but continues to consist of a finite
number of energy quanta localized at a
point in space, which can move without
dividing and are only generated and
absorbed as a whole.”3 This revolutionary
idea about particle-wave duality of light
presaged the particle-wave duality of
matter in general and opened the road for
future quantum mechanics. Louis de
Broglie, stressing the immense importance
of this discovery of Einstein, remarked
that the brief but brilliant paper, quite
apart from the question of the nature of
light itself, was like thunder from an
almost clear sky, and that the crisis
created by it had still not been eliminated
50 years later. In 1905 itself, Einstein
published another paper on the Brownian
motion which laid the groundwork for
proving the real existence of molecules
and the kinetic theory of fluids proposed
by Boltzman.
EINSTEIN’S PHILOSOPHICAL THOUGHTS
Some scientists, for example, James
Jeans, and partly Arthur Eddington also,
used to think that the objective character
of matter and of the physical laws
governing it are negated in the Theory of
Relativity. Eddington said, [Space and
time] “…are not things inherent in the
external world.”4. And in the words of
Jeans, [The theory of relativity led to the
notion that] “…matter as ordinarily
understood, the matter of solid objects
and hard particles, has no existence in
reality.”5 According to him the theory of
relativity reflected a certain general
picture of matter “which must be more
mental in character”. But this is a false
understanding of the philosophical
implication of Einstein’s theory. Rather,
the concept of absolute space and
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absolute time independent of matter,
which existed in Newtonian mechanics,
has no place in the Theory of Relativity.
The theory states that space and time
has no existence independent of matter.
Space and time exist means that matter
exists in that particular space and time.
In all his research and philosophical
writings Einstein had stressed time and
again that physical laws have a real
existence independent of human
consciousness. The external world exists
independently of human consciousness,
but is knowable. He himself posed the
question, “There are two different
conceptions about the nature of the
Universe: (1) The world as a unity
dependent on humanity. (2) The world as
a reality independent of the human
factor.”6 Elsewhere he clarified his own
position, “The belief in an external world…
is the basis of all natural science.”7 In his
conversation with Rabindranath Tagore he
said, “I cannot prove that scientific truth
must be conceived as a truth that is valid
independent of humanity; but I believe it
firmly. I believe, for instance, that the
Pythagorean theorem in geometry states
something that is approximately true,
independent of the existence of man.
Anyway, if there is a reality independent
of man, there is also a truth relative to
this reality.”… “Even in our everyday life,
we feel compelled to ascribe a reality
independent of man to the objects we
use.”6 The belief in the objective reality of
nature and natural laws was the
cornerstone of Einstein’s scientific
endeavour. He believed that, “Sense
perception only gives information of this
external world…indirectly.”7 But he was
not an empiricist who considered
knowledge to be obtainable directly from
experimental data without resorting to
mental activity. According to Einstein,
scientific concepts are the result of the
work of the brain and not of the sense
organs. We get knowledge through mental
processing of sense data. We do not grasp
reality through activity of unrestricted free
thinking. He wrote, “The theoretical idea…
does not arise from and independent of
experience by a purely logical procedure.
It is produced by a creative act.”8 In
Einstein’s view scientific concepts,
principles, and theories were historical
categories. From time to time they had to
be reexamined, and adjusted to fit reality.
Einstein was not like the positivists either
who find no place for philosophy in
scientific endeavour, who maintain that
only our sensations and perceptions are
immediately given to us, and we should
limit ourselves to the study of them. In
sharp contrast to such positivists,
Einstein stressed that, “the present
difficulties of his science force the
physicist to come to grips with
philosophical problems in a greater degree
than was the case with earlier
generations.”9 He was always concerned
with the relation between epistemology
and science, “The reciprocal relationship
of epistemology and science is of
noteworthy kind. They are dependent
upon each other. Epistemology without
contact with science becomes an empty
scheme. Science without epistemology is –
insofar as it is thinkable at all – primitive
and muddled.”10 Criticizing the positivist
outlook on atomic theory he wrote, “This
is an interesting example of the fact that
even scholars of audacious spirit and fine
instinct can be obstructed in the
interpretation of facts by philosophical
prejudices. The prejudice – which has by
no means died out in the meantime –
consists in the faith that facts themselves
can and should yield scientific knowledge
without free conceptual construction.”11
Einstein believed in the power of human
reason and had a profound faith in its
capacity to reveal the hidden secrets of
the Universe, to know the essence of the
objects of the external world on the basis
of scientific concepts.
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He was a firm believer in causality and
determinism, and this belief brought him
in philosophical conflict with the
propositions of quantum mechanics even
though it was his own work, which in a
way led to quantum interpretation of
matter. The statistical character of the
quantum mechanical laws, the philosophy
of the Uncertainty Principle violated his
philosophical view of causally determined
natural phenomena. His debates with
Niels Bohr on these issues have the epic
character of the battle of titans. Einstein
did not disregard the phenomenal success
of quantum mechanics in its applications,
but he was of the view that it did not give
the complete picture of reality. He wrote,
“Quantum mechanics is very impressive.
But an inner voice tells me it is not yet the
real thing.”12 “I still believe in the
possibility of giving a model of reality
which shall represent events themselves
and not the probability of their
occurrence.”13 Einstein believed that the
Universe and its workings should be
comprehensible to man. Therefore, these
workings must conform to discoverable
laws; thus there was no room for chance
and indeterminacy. To the end of his days
he held on to this belief.
Some argue that though Einstein
reflected materialist outlook in his
scientific work, his philosophical thoughts
were influenced by idealism – he was a
believer in God and religion. One of his
comments is oft quoted in this context,
“Science without religion is lame, religion
without science is blind.”14 However, it
would be an oversimplification to label
Einstein in this way. We should critically
judge Einstein’s thoughts on religion. It
can certainly be said that he was not a
believer in religion in the crude sense; he
did not have faith in organized religion
and in overt religious practices. He
himself wrote that at a quite young age he
“reached the conviction that much in the
stories of the Bible could not be true.”11
He categorized religion as a historical
phenomenon that arose at a certain stage
of human development and passed
through a number of stages on its way.
About the origin of religious thoughts and
practices he wrote, “Since at this stage of
existence understanding of causal
connections is usually poorly developed,
the human mind creates illusory beings
more or less analogous to itself on whose
wills and actions these fearful happenings
depend. Thus one tries to secure the
favour of these beings by carrying out
actions and offering sacrifices, which,
according to the tradition handed down
from generation to generation, propitiate
them or make them well disposed toward
a mortal.”14 He also came close to an
understanding of the class character of
religion. “In many cases a leader or ruler
or a privileged class whose position rests
on other factors combines priestly
functions with its secular authority in
order to make the latter more secure; or
the political rulers and the priestly caste
make common cause in their own
interests.”14 He was also aware of the
contradiction between religion and
science: “When one views the matter
historically, one is inclined to look upon
science and religion as irreconcilable
antagonists.”14 In a letter to a school-
going child he wrote, “Scientific research
is based on the idea that everything is
determined by laws of nature, and
therefore this holds for the action of
people. For this reason, a research
scientist will be hardly inclined to believe
that events could be influenced by a
prayer, i.e., by a wish addressed to a
supernatural Being.”15 We can form an
idea of Einstein’s religion from his various
writings. “…science can only be created by
those who are thoroughly imbued with
aspiration toward truth and
understanding. This source of feeling,
however, springs from the sphere of
religion.”14 When asked whether he
believes in God or not, he replied, “I
believe in Spinoza’s God who reveals
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himself in the harmony of all beings, not
in a God who concerns himself with the
fate and actions of man.”16 In the letter
mentioned above, he further wrote,
“Everyone who is seriously involved in the
pursuit of science becomes convinced that
a spirit is manifested in the laws of the
Universe – a spirit vastly superior to that
of man and one in the face of which we
with our modest powers must feel
humble. In this way the pursuit of science
leads to religious feeling of a special sort,
which is indeed quite different from the
religiosity of someone more naïve.”15 Belief
in the existence of a law-governed ordered
Universe, and faith in the power of human
reason to unravel the laws of nature
together act as the source of what he calls
“cosmic religious feeling”. “A knowledge of
the existence of something which we
cannot penetrate, our perceptions of the
profoundest reason, and the most radiant
beauty, which only in their most primitive
forms are accessible to our minds – it is
this knowledge and this emotion that
constitute true religiosity; in this sense
and in this alone, I am a deeply religious
man. I cannot conceive of a God who
rewards and punishes his creatures, or
has a will of the kind that we experience
in ourselves.”17 He also said that cosmic
religious feeling “can give rise to no
definite notion of a God and no
theology.”14 Critical analysis of Einstein’s
thoughts show that in his scientific
philosophy he was consistently
materialistic, and he went a long way in
reflecting materialistic outlook on general
philosophical issues, but in a subtle way
an idealist trait did exist in his thinking.
This, of course, is not unexpected because
without being a dialectical materialist one
cannot carry materialist thinking covering
all spheres. Einstein was certainly not a
dialectical materialist, but this is not so
important in correctly evaluating Einstein.
Einstein’s scientific research strengthened
the materialist philosophy and has
revealed the dialectical nature of the
existence of matter in space-time
framework.
EINSTEIN’S SOCIAL THOUGHTS
Einstein was not a scientist residing in an
ivory tower. As a scientist he was acutely
conscious of his social obligations. His
personal life was simple, unostentatious.
“I never strove for the fleshpots and
luxury, and even have a good deal of
disdain for them. My passion for social
justice brought me in conflict with
people”. In a very moving piece he wrote,
“A hundred times everyday I remind
myself that my inner and outer life are
based on the labour of other men, living
and dead, and that I must exert myself in
order to give in the same measure as I
have received and am still receiving. I am
strongly driven to frugal life and am often
oppressively aware that I am engrossing
an undue amount of the labour of my
fellow men.”17 From this urge to give back
to the society in some measure what he
had received from it, Einstein actively
involved himself with social movements,
took up the cause of the exploited and the
downtrodden. He had a deep compassion
for people who were politically or
economically oppressed. In his message to
the students of the California Institute of
Technology he said, “It is not enough you
should understand about applied science
in order that your work may increase
man’s blessings. Concern for man himself
and his fate must always form the chief
interest of all technical endeavours….
Never forget this in the midst of your
diagrams and equations.”18 Just as he
realized the law-governed character of the
natural phenomena, he accepted the law-
governed link and causal dependence of
social events. At least partly he could
grasp the causes of social inequity, and
throughout his life he registered his
protest against oppression and injustice
in whichever way he could. With deep
pain and anguish he noted that advances
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of science and technology have created
enormous wealth for mankind, have made
it possible to emancipate man from
monotonous physical labour, but the
fruits of these advances have not reached
the common man. On the contrary,
tyranny, exploitation and human misery
have increased many times. “Our time is
rich in inventive minds, the inventions of
which could facilitate our lives
considerably. We are crossing the seas by
power and utilize power also in order to
relieve humanity from all tiring muscular
work. We have learned to fly and we are
able to send messages and news without
any difficulty over the entire world
through electric waves. However, the
production and distribution of
commodities is entirely unorganized, so
that everybody must live in fear of being
eliminated from the economic cycle, in
this way suffering for the want of
everything.”19 He perceived that the
production relations in the society in
which he was living, the capitalist society,
were the progenitors of the miseries. In
the essay ‘Why Socialism?’ he wrote, “The
economic anarchy of capitalist society as
it exists today is, in my opinion, the real
source of the evil. We see before us a huge
community of producers the members of
which are unceasingly striving to deprive
each other of the fruits of their collective
labour – not by force, but on the whole in
faithful compliance with legally
established rules. In this respect, it is
important to realize that the means of
production – that is to say, the entire
productive capacity that is needed for
producing consumer goods as well as
additional capital goods – may legally be,
and for the most part are, the private
property of individuals.”20 In his writings
we find even the defense of the theory of
surplus value which Marx had formulated
many years earlier. “The owner of the
means of production is in a position to
purchase the labour power of the worker.
By using the means of production, the
worker produces new goods which become
the property of the capitalists. The
essential point about this process is the
relation between what the worker
produces and what he is paid, both
measured in terms of real value. Insofar
as the labour contract is ‘free’, what the
worker receives is determined not by the
real value of the goods he produces, but
by his minimum needs and by the
capitalists’ requirements for labour power
in relation to the number of workers
competing for jobs. It is important to
understand that even in theory the
payment of the worker is not determined
by the value of his product.”20 He
mentioned, “Private capital tends to
become concentrated in few hands, partly
because of competition arising among the
capitalists, and partly because
technological development and the
increasing division of labour encourage
the formation of larger units of production
at the expense of the smaller ones. The
result of these developments is an
oligarchy of private capital the enormous
power of which cannot be effectively
checked even by a democratically
organized political society.”20 Further,
“Production is carried on for profit, not for
use. There is no provision that all those
able and willing to work will always be in
a position to find employment; an “army of
unemployed” almost always exist…The
profit motive, in conjunction with
competition among capitalists, is
responsible for an instability in the
accumulation and utilization of capital
which leads to increasingly severe
depressions.”20 So he got attracted to
socialism. “I am convinced there is only
one way to eliminate these grave evils,
namely through the establishment of a
socialist economy, accompanied by an
educational system which would be
oriented toward social goals. In such an
economy, the means of production are
owned by society itself and are utilized in
a planned fashion. A planned economy,
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which adjusts production to the needs of
the community, would distribute the work
to be done among all those able to work
and would guarantee a livelihood to every
man, woman and child. The education of
the individual, in addition to promoting
his own innate abilities, would attempt to
develop in him a sense of responsibility for
his fellow-men in place of the glorification
of power and success in our present
society.”20
Einstein was an ardent pacifist, fiercely
opposed to war and militarism. During the
First World War and its aftermath, even at
the risk of being branded as anti-national,
he joined the anti-war struggles and even
worked to organize scientists and
intelligentsia for protest against war and
militarism. After the Nazis came to power
in Germany he condemned their attacks
on democracy and on the Jews, and
ultimately renounced the German
citizenship as a sign of protest. He
resigned from the Prussian and Bavarian
Academies of Sciences. In an open letter
to the Prussian Academy he wrote, “…[I
would] resign my position in the Academy
and renounce my Prussian citizenship; I
gave as my reason for these steps that I
did not wish to live in a country where the
individual does not enjoy equality before
the law, and freedom of speech and
teaching.”21 Even after emigrating to the
United States he was fully aware of the
danger of Nazism. So when the news came
that the German scientists were
continuing their research on uranium and
that the Germans had got control over the
Czech uranium mines and had actually
stopped the sale of uranium from these
mines, he became immediately concerned
that if the Nazis came to acquire an
atomic bomb, it would be a disaster for
human civilization. He wrote his famous
letter to President Roosevelt, as a
consequence of which the US Government
stepped up the effort to manufacture the
atomic bomb. It culminated in the tragedy
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, followed by
the nuclear arms race and the Cold War.
Einstein did not foresee this, but he
immediately realized the menace of atomic
war and the danger of self-annihilation of
mankind. After the Second World War, as
long as he was alive, he took a leading role
in the anti-war movement. It became the
mission of his life to stop arms race, to
bring about nuclear disarmament and to
ensure world peace. To avert the
possibility of the arms race between USA
and Soviet Union culminating in atomic
war, he appealed to the leaders of both the
countries to settle their differences
through negotiations. He talked of a world
government as the only way to ensure
world peace. He insisted that peace among
nations could be maintained in the atomic
age only by bringing all men together
under a system of world law. The Russel-
Einstein manifesto played a big role in
mobilizing scientists for peace. It was his
last appeal to the reason and conscience
of humanity.
But in spite of the fervent attempts of
Einstein and all the other concerned
people, arms race among nations is still
continuing unabated, the world could not
be made free of war. Today there is no
Soviet Union, no Cold War between the
socialist and the capitalist camps, but war
has not been ended, imperialist
aggression has not stopped, rather it has
become more violent and ruthless. In Iraq,
Afghanistan, Africa and Latin America
wars are going on either through direct
aggression of the imperialist powers or
being fomented by them. It is a tragedy of
Einstein’s life that in spite of his whole-
hearted sincerity and passionate attempts
he did not succeed in the anti-war
struggle and the struggle for world peace.
Moreover Einstein could not comprehend
the politics that the capitalist-imperialists
conduct from their class interest. He failed
to realize that as long as capitalism-
imperialism exists aggression will
continue, wars will be waged and peace
hampered. From the same lack of
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comprehension of the imperialist class
interest he became a victim of the Zionist
conspiracy. Anti-semitism in European
society and social-cultural oppression of
the Jews made Einstein sympathetic to
the Zionist cause for a separate homeland
for the Jews. He did not visualize this as a
conventional nation state, but more as a
cultural centre where Arabs and Jews
would peacefully live together. But he did
not discern the imperialist class design
underlying the formation of Israel.
Einstein who was always a champion of
the underdog did not perceive the gross
injustice of uprooting the Palestinian
people from their homeland. But we
should not make an overall evaluation of
Einstein on this basis alone. The great
tragedy of this noble scientist is that he,
who through his researches brought
about revolutionary change in how man
thinks about the external world, who
throughout his life showed acute
consciousness of his social obligation,
who always did what he thought was the
right thing to do, without paying any heed
to petty considerations or personal or
professional gains, died without seeing
any sign heralding the society of his
dream, based on justice and equity and
free from exploitation, and without being
able to influence the world politics in any
significant way.
If we look at the scientific scene in our
country, we sadly find that the tradition of
combining commitment to science with
obligation to society which Einstein
epitomized is lost today. Thousands of
people have taken up science as a
profession, but how many us are truly
committed to seek for the truth and to
discharge our duty to the society?
Unconcern about the society is on the
increase, and the common tendency is to
look upon scientific work as a career
building activity. Remembering Einstein
can have only one objective, to redeem our
pledge to direct our scientific activity for
finding the truth, for betterment of the life
of the people, for fulfilling our obligation
to the society.
References
1. Isaac Newton. Principia Mathematica.
2. J. C. Maxwell. Philosophical Transactions of the
Royal Society of London, v. 155, 1865.
3. Albert Einstein. Annalen der Physik, v. 17,
1905.
4. Arthur Eddington. Space Time and Gravitation,
1959.
5. James Jeans. The New Background Of Science,
1947.
6. Albert Einstein and Rabindranath Tagore. The
Nature of Reality. Modern Review, v. 49, 1931.
7. Albert Einstein. Maxwell’s influence on the
evolution of the idea of physical reality. In, Ideas
and Opinions, 1954.
8. Albert Einstein. Scientific American, v. 182,
1950.
9. Albert Einstein. Remarks on Bertrand Russel’s
Theory of Knowledge. In, The Philosophy of
Bertrand Russell, Ed. P. A. Schilpp, 1944.
10. Albert Einstein. Reply to Criticisms. In Albert
Einstein: Philosopher Scientist, Ed. P. A. Schilpp,
1949.
11. Albert Einstein. Autobiographical Notes. Albert
Einstein: Philosopher Scientist, Ed. P. A. Schilpp,
1949.
12. Albert Einstein. Letter to Max Born. 1926.
13. Albert Einstein. From a Lecture, Quoted in
Quantum Revolution III: What is Reality?, by, G.
Venkataraman, 1994.
14. Albert Einstein. Religion and Science. In, Ideas
and Opinions, 1954.
15. Albert Einstein. The Human Side, Ed: H. Dukas
and B. Hoffman, 1979
16. Albert Einstein. In, Albert Einstein: Philosopher
Scientist, Ed. P. A. Schilpp, 1949.
17. Albert Einstein. The World As I See It. In, Ideas
and Opinions, 1954.
18. Albert Einstein. Address before the Student
Body, California Institute of Technology. In, A
Treasury of Science, Ed. H. Shapely, S. Rapport,
H. Wright. 1946.
19. Albert Einstein. Letter for Time Capsule. The
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20. Albert Einstein. Why Socialism? In, Ideas and
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