In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity. |
Albert Einstein was the embodiment of pure intellect,
the bumbling professor with the German accent, a comic cliche in a thousand
films. Instantly recognizable, like Charlie Chaplin's Little Tramp, Albert
Einstein's shaggy-haired visage was as familiar to ordinary
people as to the matrons who fluttered about him in salons from Berlin to
Hollywood. Yet he was unfathomably profound — the genius among geniuses who
discovered, merely by thinking about it, that the universe was not as it
seemed.
Even now scientists marvel at the daring of general relativity
("I still can't see how he thought of it," said the late Richard
Feynman, no slouch himself). But the great physicist was also engagingly
simple, trading ties and socks for mothy sweaters and sweatshirts. He tossed
off pithy aphorisms ("Science is a wonderful thing if one does not have to
earn one's living at it") and playful doggerel as easily as equations.
Viewing the hoopla over him with humorous detachment, he variously referred to
himself as the Jewish saint or artist's model. He was a cartoonist's dream come
true.
Much to his surprise, his ideas, like Darwin’s, reverberated
beyond science, influencing modern culture from painting to poetry. At first
even many scientists didn’t really grasp relativity, prompting Arthur
Eddington’s celebrated wisecrack (asked if it was true that only three people
understood relativity, the witty British astrophysicist paused, then said, “I
am trying to think who the third person is”). To the world at large,
relativity seemed to pull the rug out from under perceived
reality. And for many advanced thinkers of the 1920s, from Dadaists to Cubists
to Freudians, that was a fitting credo, reflecting what science historian
David Cassidy calls “the incomprehensiveness of the
contemporary scene--the fall of monarchies, the
upheaval of the social order, indeed, all the turbulence of
the 20th century.”
5:15 PM
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