home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93HT1253>
- <link 93XP0395>
- <link 93TO0083>
- <title>
- Einstein: Death Of A Genius
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Einstein Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- May 2, 1955
- Death of a Genius
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Almost every morning for the last 22 years, a self-effacing
- little man, careless-clad in baggy pants and a blue stocking cap,
- stepped down from the front porch of a modest frame house at 112
- Mercer Street, Princeton, N.J., and trudged off to the Institute
- for Advanced Studies. At a glance, the little-man could have been
- the caretaker or a gardener. He puffed meekly at his pipe; he
- sidled in quietly; he seldom spoke unless spoken to. But on a
- second look, a rare quality seemed to glow in that sad and
- wizened face, with its disordered halo of white hair and its
- soulful brown eyes. The quality was genius, a compound of soaring
- intellect and wide-ranging imagination that had carried Albert
- Einstein past the confines of man's old scientific certitudes and
- deeper into the material mysteries of the universe than any man
- before.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Professor Einstein trudged to no more in the
- grounds of his beloved institute. A lingering gall-bladder
- infection sent him to the hospital. Blood began to escape from
- his aorta, the main artery. Shortly after midnight he muttered a
- few sentences in German. The night nurse could not understand,
- and the last words of the modern world's scientist were lost. At
- 1:15 a.m. Albert Einstein, 76, died in his sleep.
- </p>
- <p> Great Transformer. "No other man contributed so much to the
- vast expansion of 20 century knowledge," said President
- Eisenhower. Pravda editorialized: "A great transformer of natural
- science." Said the Prime Minister of Israel: "The world has lost
- its foremost genius."
- </p>
- <p> Thousands of other tributes poured in, but words could not
- convey the feelings of a world in which the many unquestioningly
- accepted Einstein's genius while only the few--and they, of
- scientific training--adequately understood what he had
- contributed to knowledge. In person, Albert Einstein was
- diffident, almost childlike, As a man of scientific thought, he
- strode boldly with history's handful: Pythagoras and Archimedes,
- Copernicus and Newton.
- </p>
- <p> Einstein's only instruments were a pencil and scratch-pad;
- his laboratory was under his cap. Yet he saw farther than a
- telescope, deeper than a microscope. Einstein traveled in lonely
- splendor to the crossroads of the visible and the invisible,
- expressing each in terms of the other. He came close to proving
- by mathematicians' logic what men of religion had long accepted
- on philosophers' reasoning or faith: that the laws which move the
- tiniest unseen electrons must also govern the macrocosms of
- intergalactic space. Einstein's scratch-pad theorems broke
- through the thought barriers of knowledge and rewrote the basic
- scientific law of the universe. The now-mundane miracle of
- television is a splinter off Einstein's achievement; the mushroom
- clouds of atomic fission and hydrogen fusion are his unwanted
- monuments; mankind's chance to turn earth-shaking force into good
- is his legacy.
- </p>
- <p> Demoniac Possession. The force that drove Einstein to genius
- he called "a demoniac possession...like that of a lover." Yet
- for all his scientific wisdom, he was a worldly innocent. He had
- a lamb-like helplessness in the face of everyday problems; he was
- easily presumed upon. He once agreed to buy an elevator for his
- two-story home because "the man who came to interest me in it--I
- liked him so much, I could not say no." He loved jokes and
- laughed easily. He loved humanity, but he was comfortable with
- few of its members. "My passionate interest in social justice,"
- he wrote in 1949, "has always contrasted oddly with my pronounced
- lack of desire for direct contact with other human beings...I...have never belonged to my country, my home...or even
- to my immediate family with my whole heart."
- </p>
- <p> Family to Support. Einstein's family lived in Bavaria, where
- his father sold electrical goods. Albert was born in Ulm, in
- 1879. As a child he would make up songs, which he chanted in his
- room. But at school he was shy and backward, and his parents
- wondered whether his brain was up to par. When he was twelve, he
- got a copy of Euclid's Geometry. Thirty years later, Einstein
- recalled: "It made me realize that man is capable, through the
- force of thought alone, of achieving...stability and purity."
- At 13 he read Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Still, it took him
- two attempts to pass the entrance exams to Zurich Polytechnicum.
- </p>
- <p> After graduation, Einstein settle in Switzerland, married
- Mileva Maric, a Serbian mathematician. With a family to support,
- he got a job as an examiner in the Swiss Patent Office. But "I
- soon learned to scent out that which was able to lead to
- fundamentals. I turned aside form everything else." During
- working hours he would scribble his ideas down on scraps of
- paper. Evenings, he could be seen wheeling a baby carriage
- through the streets, halting now and then to jot down rows of
- mathematical symbols.
- </p>
- <p> Out of those obscure symbols came the most explosive ideas
- of the century. They were the algebraic catalysts and set in
- motion a reappraisal of every premise and postulate of modern
- natural science, a physical revolution whose end is far from
- sight. In 1905 Einstein published his jottings in five papers. In
- the fifth, and shortest, paper (Does the Inertia of a Body Depend
- on its Energy Content?) lay the mathematical nuclei of the atomic
- age.
- </p>
- <p> E=mc2. For more than 200 years, science had accepted
- Newton's laws of motion as unalterable. In easily parsed
- schoolboy terms, they seemed to explain everything, from the
- behavior of gases to the nature of heat. But in the 1880s, more
- sensitive instruments were uncovering awkward phenomena,
- particularly in the physics of light. These phenomena operated in
- open violation of Newton's laws. To make Newton's physics work,
- scientists presumed the existence of a substance called ether,
- which they thought was necessary to carry light waves through
- space. But experiments soon proved that ether does not exist.
- Scientists were plunged into a paralyzing dilemma, caught between
- their reliance on the old Newtonian concept and the undisputable
- results of their experiments. For close to 20 years they floated
- in an etherless void.
- </p>
- <p> Einstein's calculations filled the void, and stretched it
- far into the cosmos with a brief, daring equation that tripped
- off the tongue with the doomful simplicity of the first few notes
- of Beethoven's Fifth: E=mc2. This meant that a mass (m) of one
- gram of matter contains within itself energy (E) which is the
- equivalent in ergs to the square of the velocity of light (c2) in
- centimeters per second. Einstein went on to demonstrate
- mathematically that there can be no absolute measure of time or
- space because all spatial bodies are in perpetual motion,
- relative to one another. he showed that the increased speed of
- mass, whether a railroad train or a whole whirling galaxy, not
- only changes the mass, but alters the very yardsticks by which
- men seek to measure it. Einstein's conclusion: "Mass is merely
- another form of energy."
- </p>
- <p> Sum-Up of 2,000 Years. Almost overnight, the Swiss patent
- clerk became the world's most famous scientist. Universities
- competed for him, and in 1912 he became a professor at the famed
- Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin. In 1915 Einstein expanded his
- theory into the General Theory of Relativity.
- </p>
- <p> The first practical proof of Einstein's new cosmic concepts
- came in 1919, when measurements of the sun's eclipse proved that
- light rays bend around solid objects, as Einstein's theory
- postulated. he won the Nobel Prize in 1921. Bertrand Russell
- wrote: "The theory of relativity is probably the greatest
- synthetic achievement of the human intellect up to the present
- time. It sums up the mathematical and physical labors of more
- than 2,000 years. Pure geometry, from Pythagoras to Riemann, the
- dynamics and astronomy of Galileo and Newton, the theory of
- electro-magnetism as it resulted from the researches of Faraday,
- Maxwell and their successors--all absorbed, with the necessary
- modifications, in the theories of Einstein."
- </p>
- <p> Only a handful of scientists understood what it was all
- about. The nonscientist simply took the handful's word of faith.
- It took him 40 years to see the proof that E=mc2 means that an
- ounce of matter--sand, oxygen, uranium--holds within itself
- as much energy as that given off by the explosion of 875,000
- tons of TNT. But in the flash of Hiroshima, he saw.
- </p>
- <p> Orchids for Dinner. Einstein was happy in Germany under the
- Weimar Republic. He supported 100 poor families in Berlin, sailed
- his boat and played the violin. But when Hitler came, Einstein
- the Jew was badgered by the Brownshirts and finally driven into
- exile. He was offered a lifetime post in the cloistered School
- for Advanced Studies, and in 1933 he took up residence in
- Princeton. Quickly and unwillingly, he became a living legend.
- </p>
- <p> "My life is a simple thing that would interest no one," he
- told the first drove of reporters. But to Einstein's lasting
- astonishment, Americans were ready to idolize the shy professor
- with the eccentric look and demeanor that connoted "Genius." They
- read with fascination that money bored him (once he used a $1,500
- check as a bookmark, then lost the book), that he was absent-
- minded (he once walked into the salon of a transatlantic liner
- wearing his pajamas), that his second wife, Elsa, once ate the
- orchids on her plate at a formal banquet, mistaking them for the
- salad.
- </p>
- <p> Einstein disliked the ballyhoo, but over the years he
- learned to make use of it. From his pedestal he occasionally
- poked a finger into worldly affairs. In the '30s he asked the
- Polish government to pardon draft dodgers. In the '50s he urged
- "the little minority of intellectuals" to refuse to testify
- before congressional committees, on the grounds that "it is
- shameful for a blameless citizen to submit to such an
- inquisition."
- </p>
- <p> Bomb & Blast. Einstein was both a pacifist and a Zionist (in
- 1952 he was asked, but refused, to become the President of
- Israel). But as the Nazis destroyed the Jewish people, he made a
- decision that was to produce war's most destructive tool. One day
- in 1939, Einstein wrote a letter to President Roosevelt. Nazi
- scientists, he said, might soon be able to "set up a nuclear
- chain reaction in a large mass of uranium." "This requires
- action," F.D.R. said. Out of it came the Manhattan Project, and
- at last the atomic bomb.
- </p>
- <p> When Albert Einstein got word of Hiroshima, he seemed
- unwilling to believe it. "Ach," he said sadly. "The world is not
- yet ready for it." As A-bomb led to H-bomb, and the atomic arms
- race began, he lent his prestige to almost any ban-the-bomb
- society that asked his sponsorship. Einstein's otherworldliness
- grew more pronounced. "The wish to withdraw into myself," he
- wrote, "increased with the years." But thought his political
- forays were often Utopian, his scientific, imagination still
- soared. he had unified the concepts of space and time, matter and
- energy, gravitation and inertia, yet two great cosmic forces,
- gravitation and electromagnetism, still defied his synthesis.
- </p>
- <p> No Dice in the Cosmos. Einstein was convinced that the
- cosmos is an orderly, continuous unity; gravity and electro-
- magnetism must, therefore, have a common source. He was in a
- minority, for Planck's famed Quantum Theory, which Einstein
- himself did so much to develop, and which many modern scientists
- accept, suggests that the physical universe is made up of small
- particles (quanta) that are governed not by some orderly
- causality but by chance.
- </p>
- <p> But Einstein persisted: "I cannot believe that God plays
- dice with the cosmos." He set himself to find a new synthesis,
- which he called the Unified Filed Theory. He wanted to unify the
- field gravitation with the field of electro-magnetism, and thus
- resolve every cosmic motion into a single set of laws. On three
- occasions Einstein felt sure he was on the point of grasping the
- "final truth." But he had to admit last year that he had "not yet
- found a practical way to confront the theory with experimental
- evidence," the crucial test for any theory.
- </p>
- <p> If Einstein ever did find the secret he was looking for, it
- rests in a legacy of notes and scribblings still to be tested by
- men and machines. The search for it made the last part of his
- voyage the loneliest part of all. Albert Einstein, who often said
- he could not accept the doctrine of immortality of the soul,
- traveled the rim of mystery and at times, he admitted, it made
- him feel close to God. "I assert," he once said, "that the cosmic
- religious experience is the strongest and the noblest driving
- force...My religion consists of a humble admiration for the
- illimitable superior spirit who reveals Himself in the slight
- details we are able to perceive with our frail and feeble minds."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-