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Einstein
His Life and Times BY
PHILIPP
FRANK
TRANSLATED FROM A GERMAN MANUSCRIPT BY
GEORGE ROSEN EDITED AND REVISED BY
SHUICHI KUSAKA
ALFRED
A.
KNOPF:
HEW
4
7
THIS
IS
A BORZOI BOOK,
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED
A.
KNOPF, INC.
&
Copyright 1947 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this boo\ may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the a publisher, except by reviewer who may quote brief passages and reproduce not more than three illustrations in a review to be a or newsprinted in
magazine
paper. Manufactured in the United States of America.
PUBLISHED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN CANADA BY THE RYERSON PRESS PUBLISHED FEBRUARY 20, 1947
SECOND PRINTING, APRIL 1947
The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that
it is
comprehensible.
ALBERT EINSTEIN
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS THE PHOTOGRAPHS reproduced in this book were obtained with the friendly help of Miss Helen Dukas of Princeton, Professor
Rudolph W. Ladenburg of Princeton University, Professor Harlow Shapley of Harvard University, and Dr. and Mrs. Gustav Bucky of New York. The diagrams were designed by Mr. Gerald Holton of Harvard University, and the Index compiled with the co-operation of Miss
Massachusetts.
Martha Henderson of Cambridge,,
CONTENTS I.
1
2
EINSTEIN'S
YOUTH AND TRAINING
Family Background Childhood in
3
6
Munich
10
3
Gymnasium
4
Intellectual Interests
5 6
Departure from Munich Student at Zurich
15 18
7
Official of a Patent Office
21
II.
12
CONCEPTIONS OF THE PHYSICAL WORLD BEFORE EINSTEIN
2
Philosophical Conception of Nature Organismic Physics of the Middle Ages
3
Mechanistic Physics and Philosophy
1
25
27 28
Newtonian Mechanics
4
Relativity Principle in
5
Ether as a Mechanical Hypothesis Remnants of Medieval Concepts in Mechanistic
32
Physics Mechanistic Philosophy Ernst Mach: The General Laws of Physics Are
34
6
7 8
Critics of the
Summaries 9
of Observations Organized in Simple Forms
30
36
38
Henri Polncarl: The General Laws of Physics Are Free Creations of the Positivistic
11
Science at the
HI.
Human Mind
and Pragmatic Movements
10
End
42
of the Nineteenth Century
BEGINNING OF A
NEW ERA
1
Life in Bern
2
Interest in Philosophy
3
The Fundamental Hypotheses
40
45
IN PHYSICS 49 50
of the
Theory of Relativity
vli
53
Contents 4
5 6
Consequences of Einstein's Relativity of
Two
Hypotheses
Time
55 57
Relativity of Other Physical Concepts
63
7
Equivalence of Mass and Energy
65
8
Theory of Brownian Motion
67
9
Origin of the Quantum Theory Theory of the Photon
69
10
IV. 1
EINSTEIN
71
AT PRAGUE
Professor at the University of Zurich
74
2
Appointment
to
3
Colleagues at
Prague
4
TA? Jews
5
Einstein's Personality Portrayed in a
6
Einstein as a Professor
89
7
91
8
Generalization of the Special Theory of Relativity Influence of Gravity on the Propagation of Light
9
Departure from Prague
98
in Prague
V. 1
77 80
Prague
83
EINSTEIN
Novel
85
94
AT BERLIN
The Solvay Congress
101
2
Trip to Vienna
103
3
Invitation to Berlin
106
4
Einstein's Position in the
5
Relationship with Colleagues Relationship with Students
6 7
Outbrea^ of the World
8
German
9
Lz'jfe
VI.
iVz
Science in the
Academic Life of Berlin
109 112
116
War War
119 121
Wartime
123
THE GENERAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY
1
New
2
.R0/