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Essays in Science

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Essays in Science

 

Albert Einstein

 

 

Contents

 

Preface to the New Edition

 

Preface to Abridged Edition

 

Publisher’s Note

 

Translator’s Note

 

Principles of Research

 

Inaugural Address to the Prussian Academy of Sciences

 

On Scientific Truth

 

On the Method of Theoretical Physics

 

Johannes Kepler

 

The Mechanics of Newton and Their Influence on the Development of Theoretical Physics

 

Clerk Maxwell’s Influence on the Evolution of the Idea of Physical Reality

 

Niels Bohr

 

On the Theory of Relativity

 

What Is the Theory of Relativity?

 

The Problem of Space, Ether, and the Field in Physics

 

Notes on the Origin of the General Theory of Relativity

 

The Cause of the Formation of Meanders in the Courses of Rivers and of the So-Called Beer’s Law

 

The Flettner Ship

 

Relativity and the Ether

 

Address at Columbia University

 

A Biography of Albert Einstein

 

Preface to the New Edition

 

ALBERT EINSTEIN WAS THE
greatest physicist of the twentieth century. His image and name are recognizable to almost everyone, along with his equation
E=mc
2
, which describes the relationship between energy and mass. His impact on science and intellectual thought during his lifetime was profound.

This volume contains a collection of sixteen essays written before 1935, when Einstein was at the height of his scientific powers but not yet known as the sage of the atomic age. His stature in the world allowed him to express his views on philosophical issues relating to the field of physics. These essays established his early foray into this area.

Why are we so interested in all aspects of Einstein’s philosophical positions and his thought processes? His theories of relativity and universal gravitation are generally regarded as inaccessible to the ordinary person. Yet we know that he was an original thinker who was able to see beyond the conventional scientific worldview of his age. What is remarkable is that Einstein’s greatest discoveries belong to him alone. It is perhaps fitting that this volume is being published one hundred years after Einstein settled the question of why the sky is blue. What we see is a giant intellect struggling as an ordinary person to make sense of the realities of life in the twentieth century.

This volume concentrates on the essays on science that Albert Einstein included in the first authorized edition of
Mein Weltbild
. These essays had an amazing breadth and made many fundamental points about the nature of the universe. The central theme answered the question of how Einstein came to his theories. He believed that the only source of knowledge was experience, and that in the case of general relativity such experience did not always suggest the scientific truth of a theory. The development of a theory depended on “only intuition resting on a sympathetic understanding of experience.” It was the “object of all theory to make the irreducible elements as simple and few in number as possible.” He was “convinced that we can discover by purely mathematical constructions […] the key to the understanding of natural phenomena.” Experience suggests, the mind constructs (with the help of mathematics), and experience confirms.

Einstein bolstered his argument by tracing the development of various universal theories of science and the advances that these theories brought to our ability to understand the world. Euclid’s geometry gave “the human intellect the confidence in itself for subsequent achievements.” “Purely logical thinking [such as Euclid] cannot yield us any knowledge of the empirical world.” Galileo and Kepler showed that “all knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it.” And Newton “still believed that the basic laws of his system could be derived from experience.”

Further, in his essay
On
Scientific Truth
, the idea of a superior mind as conceived in Spinoza’s “pantheistic” religion revealing itself in the world of experience represented Einstein’s conception of God.

Spinoza’s metaphysics created a world view which was in conflict with the idea of an ever-expanding universe as predicted by an early version of the generalized relativity theory. By 1919, Einstein had amended his general theory of relativity to include a cosmological term so that the universe would be spatially self-enclosed as outlined in
On the Theory of Relativity
. In 1929, Edwin Hubble verified by astronomical observations that the universe was expanding and consequently there was at some time a “big bang.” Had Einstein not added the cosmological term and accepted his early version of the generalized relativity theory the expanding universe would perhaps have been his greatest predication.

With the advent of Maxwell, Faraday, Hertz, and Lorentz there was a shift from description of material points to electro-magnetic fields, which became the ultimate entity. According to Einstein the development of field theory led directly to the special theory of relativity once he realized that field theory creates “reciprocal actions between bodies […] by processes which are propagated through space at a finite speed.” Such fields “ruled out the existence of forces acting at a distance, with the resulting destruction of the notion of absolute simultaneity.” Einstein felt that a final leap had to be made to develop the general theory of relativity. Such a theory can no longer be based on observation and reality. The theory must first be conceived through intuition by making the theory as simple as possible and then checked to see if it fits reality. It happens that generalized relativity depends heavily on mathematical constructions due to Riemann, Ricci, and Levi-Civita, which were already known. It is clear that Einstein felt that he would not have been able to complete his theory without their mathematical constructions.

Where does quantum mechanics fit into all this? Can field theory find a way to include quantum mechanics? Can there be a “unified” field theory? In 1934, Einstein had hope of finding a solution but spent the remainder of his life looking unsuccessfully for it.

Another interesting thread throughout
Essays in Science
involved the use of mathematics in developing a theory of reality. Starting with Euclid, the mathematics was whole unto itself. This was followed by Kepler, who developed the motion of the planets using circles and ellipses, which exhibit “the simplest conceivable form of regularity.” According to Einstein, Kepler’s “achievement is a particularly fine example of the truth that knowledge cannot spring from experience alone but only from the comparison of inventions of the intellect with observed facts.” Kepler’s laws represented integrals of the motion. Newton’s mechanics required the development of the calculus, ordinary derivatives, and differential equations. Field theory required partial derivatives. And finally, general relativity required the Rici calculus and the concept of invariant derivatives, which were independent of the geometry of space.

In the essay
The Cause of the Formation of Meanders . . .
Einstein used simple arguments to give the “elementary principles involved [and a] short qualitative exposition of them.” In the next pages he used thought experiments to prove his thesis. Together with the following essay,
The Flettner Ship,
they provide outstanding examples of Einstein’s mind at work.

Einstein’s connection to all things German, and in particular the scientific community in Berlin, through his appointment to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics, made it very painful for him to give up his German citizenship. Throughout his years in America he sought the friendship and association with German Jews. Through this connection he developed a deep friendship with Dr. Dagobert D. Runes, the founder of Philosophical Library, who had written his doctoral dissertation on Spinoza. Many of Einstein’s essays were subsequently published by Philosophical Library, which is now reissuing this volume.

Neil Berger

Associate Professor Emeritus of Mathematics

University of Illinois at Chicago

August 2010

Preface to Abridged Edition

 

The World as I See It
in its original form includes essays by Einstein on Judaism, Germany, Politics and Pacifism and sundry other topics. These have been omitted in the present abridged edition. The object of this reprint is simply to give the general reader an opportunity to examine some of the distinguished scholar’s papers dealing with science.

Publisher’s Note

to the original edition, entitled “The World as I See It”

 

ALBERT EINSTEIN IS ONE
of the most modest people in the world. In the letters and papers in this book he constantly refers to his “accidental” fame and his “unearned popularity.” So deep-rooted is this feeling that he has merely tilled his own row, howbeit that row was an inconceivably fertile one, that for many years his friends and intimates were unable to prevail upon him to publish his letters, papers and speeches, although opportunities and requests were showered on him. Even his scientific articles he would release to none save academic journals that do not reach the general public. The imagination of the world is stirred by the name of Albert Einstein, and yet hitherto it has had only the scantiest material to feed upon. Occasional, all-too-brief interviews; a few instances where Einstein suppressed his modesty for the sake of some great humanitarian cause; and the famous four-page pamphlet on the special theory of relativity.

The publishers do not know what good fortune at last prompted Albert Einstein to relax his attitude a little. Perhaps he felt that in times like these each man must sacrifice himself if he can help but a little to alleviate the horrible conditions which have fallen upon the world. If anything could break Einstein’s silence, it was the threat of war in Europe. Perhaps, too, it was the persecution of his people, the Jews. Perhaps it was, in some small degree, a further extension of his modesty in a desire to show how much his scientific work has been prepared for, supported, and amplified by less heralded collaborators, as he explains in his articles and speeches on Kepler, Newton, Maxwell, Planck, Niels Bohr and others. Whatever the cause, he at last gave permission to one of his intimates, who prefers to conceal his identity beneath the initials J.H., because his was a labor of love, to collect and publish certain of his writings.

These papers were originally published by the Querido Verlag in Amsterdam. In fairness to Professor Einstein, his American publishers would like to make it clear that although they have his full authorization to translate the German text as published in Holland, and although the documents from which the original publication was made have his authentication, there has been no further collaboration by him. Because of this, the publishers have taken extra and unusual care to check every detail of the translation. An expert has gone over the work to make sure that it represents the exact meaning of Professor Einstein. Thus, the responsibility for the accuracy of the translation, though every attempt has been made to insure it, must not be placed with Professor Einstein.

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