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- <text id=93HT0022>
- <link 93XP0394>
- <link 93TO0081>
- <link 93HT1250>
- <link 93HT1246>
- <title>
- 1920s: Albert Einstein
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1920s Highlights
- People
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- Albert Einstein
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>(FEBRUARY 18, 1929)
- </p>
- <p> As 24-cent copies of Albert Einstein's abstruse "Coherent
- Field Theory" reached the U.S. last week, the man himself, his
- wife and daughter plodded about Wannsee, simply hunting rooms
- at that lake colony twelve miles from Berlin.
- </p>
- <p> The man's face was yellowish. He looked haggard, nervous,
- irritable. He sounded querulous. An internal disease, which
- last summer he feared would kill him before he could complete
- his newest theory, has made him so. That disease--plus the
- harrying visitors who buzzed and scraped about him the past
- fortnight, and years of indoor, sedentary work. Dr. Einstein,
- like so many other scholars, takes no physical exercise at all.
- </p>
- <p> He works in the attic of a five-story apartment house at
- Haberland-strasse, 5, a quiet thoroughfare near Berlin's
- zoological garden. A large iron door, which clangs as it shuts,
- keeps him in solitude and silence. The room smells of tobacco.
- He smokes a long-stem briar pipe, into which he tamps tobacco
- with his thumb. His working tools are paper and pencils on a
- good-sized table and his books (cheaply bound in paper for the
- most part) on shelves around the wall. Ornaments are a four-foot
- telescope and a large terrestrial globe. The grand piano in the
- room is his diversion.
- </p>
- <p> Sailing was the main reason for the Einstein's house-hunting
- at Wannsee last week. The lake is a bulge in the Havel River and
- boats for hire are plentiful. And it is not far (only twelve
- miles) from Berlin, where Dr. Einstein must earn his academic
- salaries by explaining his physical theories of the world, of
- electricity, of magnetism, of the real unity of all.
- </p>
- <p> In his world nothing stands still. All moves; all changes.
- There are no straight lines. Everything curves. The world has
- an end but no boundary. It is like an orange with the rind pared
- down to nothing and the pips taken out. Within and around that
- imaginary sphere which remains of the orange, intangible forces
- wave in every direction. Some waves bump and dampen each other's
- motion until they have no movement left. But their energy is not
- lost. It goes into other waves which may bump and merge and
- thereby strengthen each other. Electrons and protons form and
- attract each other. They create atoms of matter, the atoms
- molecules, the molecules earth, water, air. Fire (heat) is one
- effect of their interaction.
- </p>
- <p> The Einstein world is a great "field" which has height,
- breadth, depth and time as its elements. Measuring those four
- elements requires a new kind of geometry--fourth dimensional
- geometry, Einstein geometry. It is infinitely more complicated
- than Euclidean geometry taught at high schools and colleges.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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