Easy Lessons in Einstein: A Discussion of the More Intelligible Features of the Theory of Relativity / With an Article by Albert Einstein and a Bibliography
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.
This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.
As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.
Edwin Emery Slosson (1865 – 1929) was an American magazine editor, author, journalist and chemist. He was the first head of Science Service, and a notable popularizer of science.
Maybe this is actually more of a four-star book. It does a remarkably good job in simplifying the theory relativity for the casual reader by presenting it through a range of fictional conversations. However, I feel more constrained to keep it at a perfectly respectable three merely because my attention wavered in and out as I listened to it, which was much more likely my fault than this book itself, but all the same I didn't follow it well enough to say it was as high as a four-star experience personally.
It will start from the end of the book, which contains a fantastic letter written by Einstein himself and published around the same time as the Lenin revolution in Russia, 1918. He claims proudly that he is a Jew from Switzerland and a German man of Science. He explains to a UK audience that he is not attacking their magnificent Newton nor Newtonian physics. His attack is on Euclidean Elements (Στοιχεῖα Stoikheîa) by using the Empedocles 4 Element of life and the addition that Aristoteles made by adding Aether.
He comes after 3000 years and 100 billion births to challenge Greek logic with his imagination. Im not saying maths becouse Einstein was not good at maths. His teacher in maths, Constantin Carathéodory (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Καραθεοδωρή), didnt do a good job teaching him. Einstein's superpower was not maths but imagination and simplifying complex problems.
Aether used as part of his imagination mix has now been removed from science books and replaced by Dark matter and Dark Energy. Even though Aether means Black (Aithiopes (Ethiopians; see Aethiopia), telling "people with a burnt (black) visage"), it has been replaced with a more explicit term nowadays.
Back then, only 12 people could understand what he was talking about, which was very simple; the maths proving it, however, was very hard.
Hold a piece of paper with both hands, and ask a friend to add a rock; what happens to the article? It bends. Here you go; time-space BENDS when an external force is applied. That is the basic logic of Einstein, but you need to use advanced mathematics to prove what you observe. You need to add the coordinates of each element and calculate every move and interaction, and the maths equation must match what the eye sees. That is pure Science, to test and verify.
With this approach, Einstein could imagine to his head the whole universe around us and then had the will and the courage to try to prove it with maths or ask others to correct his formulas, but it did no matter. Once he solved the maths, he could simplify even further by claiming E=mc² .
This book tries to simplify the maths around it with examples, and tests that were made back then, to transfer that wild imagination of the genius to all, to popularize the subject. I think it does a great job.
I Im not sure if Einstein was the first to understand the cosmos and the forces around it among us. Another Great Greek philosopher, Pythagoras, and his theory of Musica Universalis. We have only fragments of that work; many of his papers either burned in the great fire of Alexandria or Christian priests reused the paper and wrote Christian texts on top of them. Im am sure that the time will come in the future that Einstein will be challenged back by the same people he challenged, but first, we need to find those lost documents. Even more importantly, to understand why 3000 years passed and this earth gave us only 1 Einstein.
That, for me, is a bigger mystery than how the outside universe works. What do you think?
"Easy Lessons in Einstein" fue escrito en 1920 por E. Slosson, un conocido divulgador y periodista de la época. Decidió escribir este breve texto para explicar la teoría de la relatividad de Einstein de manera accesible, sin términos matemáticos complicados, utilizando analogías y ejemplos cotidianos, y esa es la parte más fascinante. Es muy interesante leer los debates intelectuales de esa época, las metáforas y analogías que se usaban para explicar el "novedoso" concepto de la relatividad, los esfuerzos de la comunidad científica por validar el trabajo de una de las mentes más brillantes y atrevidas de la época. Leer este libro es como viajar en el tiempo y percibir el terremoto paradigmal que se produjo al cambiar a Newton por el buen Alfred.
My father bought me this book when I was thirteen years old. I think he realized it was a sort intellectual kindling. If it is possible to really love something without completely understanding it, this book certainly qualifies. It began a lifelong quest which has made life all the more enjoyable.
Super helpful in understanding the ins and outs of the most important physics discovery in the past century. When Einstein originally put out his work, he stated that there were under 20 people in the world who would understand it accurately. We've come a long way since then, and this book (written by one of those original 20) assists in properly understanding the Theory of Relativity. Very interesting.
I've had a fairly simple understanding of Einstein's general relativity theory since it was explained to me in class 12 by physics and maths teachers. But it was never explained the way this book does. It goes over different events that lead up to confirmation of Einstein's general relativity theory. It uses a lot of weird quirky scenarios to explain the concepts like the spacetime curvature, time dilation etc. And it is all compiled in a fairly concise way. Great read.
if there is more than 5 stars I would surely choose it , this one of the best book I've ever read about relativity , it is simple , clear , with clear example I just can't describe it xD
if you would like to understand what relativity is based on you should give this book a try a huge one , I am thinking seriously in rereading this book again .
my brain at the moment is full of relativity storms xD , THIS BOOK SIMPLY ROCKS
small number of pages great number of knowledge and information I can finally say that it is really great job :)
Not extraordinarily insightful, but nevertheless a fun journey through some of the aspects of the Theory of Relativity. Slosson tries to explain in non-scientific language the implications of Einstein's proposals and gives absurd analogies to support them. All in all it was worth reading and made me understand Einstein's theories better, and that was the purpose of the author.
I enjoyed the heck out of this book. It's great listening to people reference HG Wells in the Present tense. The book is well written, well thought out, hilarious (imho). It doesn't take itself too seriously but also treats both it's audience and the subject matter with the respect due to them. The tone never becomes pedantic.
After 30 minutes into Einstein's Theory of Relativity ; I released I need to scale down my ambitious quest to something more palpable like this book ,the book has easy examples explaining the theory with real life scenarios , good start for those testing the water.
Interesting book about relativity, explains the ideas of Einstein in a simpler way. All in all a good book but at the same time difficult to understand properly.