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- <text id=90TT1141>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Einstein In Love
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 108
- Einstein in Love
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Dennis Overbye
- </p>
- <p> Albert Einstein, conceivably the last good man in this
- deconstructed century of failed gods and crumpled myths, is in
- woman trouble. A small band of scholars is claiming that much
- of the early work that made him famous, including, perhaps, the
- theory of relativity, should have been credited to his wife.
- The accusation would sound comical if it weren't tragic. This
- is Einstein, our most revered symbol of genius. We've all grown
- up with the vision of the humble patent examiner who overturned
- physics, with his corona of white hair and the sad deep eyes
- that have seen further than you can look. In our minds he
- floats like a sockless tumbleweed above the grit of mundane
- life. Behind the face we all recognize is a man we do not know.
- </p>
- <p> Even physicists fall in love. If I were casting her in a
- movie, I would pick someone dark and sultry like Marlee Matlin,
- a little mysterious with an angry, damaged air. She has a
- slight limp--do we know why? A childhood accident? Family
- tragedy? Does he find it sexy, affecting? Mileva Maric was a
- dark-haired Serbian woman who dreamed of being a physicist, a
- pre-feminist fighter, 21 when she entered the Swiss Federal
- Institute of Technology in Zurich. There she met Albert
- Einstein, a 17-year-old bohemian with thick curly hair and
- dark, warm eyes, bedroom eyes. They became lovers, sharing
- classes, textbooks and his father's disapproval. In 1902 they
- had an illegitimate daughter, who disappeared. Albert and
- Mileva married. Revolution was in the air, and they were the
- first modern couple. For pillow talk they had electrodynamics
- and atomic kinetics. In 1905 Einstein published a trio of
- brilliant papers in a single issue of the journal Annalen der
- Physik, among them the theory of relativity with its subversive
- notions of elastic space-time and interchangeable matter and
- energy. Another elucidated the quantum theory of light; still
- another a proof of the existence of atoms. You could say the
- 20th century was born in those pages.
- </p>
- <p> His fame rocketed. She sank into his shadow, a housewife
- with two sons to raise, while he pursued general relativity--the notion that gravity could be explained as "curved"
- space-time. They separated in 1914 and eventually divorced. As
- part of his alimony, he promised his future Nobel Prize money
- and delivered three years later. Einstein remarried and moved
- to America. Mileva and the kids were on their own. One son died
- in a mental institution, unvisited by his father; the other
- became an engineering professor. Mileva died in 1948, never
- having published a scientific paper under her own name.
- </p>
- <p> The movie ends, a bitter drama. Einstein's biographers
- brushed her off as a gloomy Slav and a sloppy housekeeper, not
- quite bright enough to follow her husband into the new world
- of relativity, as if she deserved obscurity.
- </p>
- <p> In 1987 his letters to her were published. Yes, love
- letters. But at least some of the language in those letters
- makes Albert and Mileva sound like research partners: "How
- happy and proud," he wrote in 1901, "I will be when the two of
- us together will have brought our work on the relative motion
- [relativity] to a victorious conclusion!" Our work?
- </p>
- <p> The idea of Mileva as collaborator can be made to fit like
- a key into certain puzzles, such as why Einstein never
- explained where he got the idea for relativity. Meanwhile,
- Mileva Maric had to be anything but a dunce in order to get
- into the Swiss Polytechnic, the M.I.T. of Central Europe. The
- most provocative piece of evidence is also the most disputed.
- According to a Yugoslav biography of Maric, Russian physicist
- Abram Joffe, now dead, claimed that he had seen the original
- 1905 papers and that they were signed Einstein-Maric. If so,
- those were the only ones she ever signed.
- </p>
- <p> Is this enough to rewrite history? Was Einstein a fraud or
- just a lousy husband? Would that we could decide. Consider the
- psychohistorical fun scholars could have with the implications
- that a woman discovered relativity--does it have anything to
- do with the traditional female emphasis on relationships and
- distrust of male absolutes? The Einstein experts are
- unconvinced. At worst, they say, Einstein was a lousy husband.
- The fact is that we will never know; Albert and Mileva have
- fallen into some Pynchonesque black hole of history that claims
- the dead. The longer we think about them, the more uncertain
- everything becomes. Einstein will forever after be a little
- more mortal, and that's good.
- </p>
- <p> Women have suffered a double blow from the Einstein fiasco.
- First a possible heroine and role model, Mileva Maric, was
- lost. Then the agent of that loss was turned around and used
- as a club against them. Einstein's legacy was style as much as
- substance. The absentminded, frizzed-out dreamer has become the
- archetype of male genius. "Don't bother Daddy. He's busy
- working on the space-time continuum." Substitute "novel," "fast
- ball" or "takeover plan" for the end of that statement, and you
- have the image of the lone genius. Genius needs a little slack;
- we all want to be Einstein. In Western civilization, a man is
- not a man who is not stiff-arming some woman who wants a
- commitment and riding alone into the sunset to Do What He Must
- Do, leaving her behind to clean up--and show up with hot soup
- when things get really bad.
- </p>
- <p> Every revolution has limits. Einstein was an ordinary man.
- He could see past space and time, yes, but not sex. Not all
- Einstein's learning nor his liberalism could keep him from
- making of Mileva what every other man made of his woman: a
- housewife, helpmate and addendum to his own identity.
- </p>
- <p> So let us not mourn the loss of a plaster saint. That saint,
- the venerated one with the windblown corona, was a dried husk.
- The man who had the great thoughts and spun the strange
- theories that inspired that veneration was young, full of vigor
- and turbulence and passion. He was hardly alone; all his organs
- worked as well as his brain. His household was squirming with
- babies when he began his greatest work, on general relativity.
- Einstein's physics flourished not in the absence of life but
- in its fullness. His scientific life blossomed at the same time
- as the rest of his life. When he was in love.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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