Home Search by Brand Hand Tools Clamps Hammers Wrenches  
  What are you shopping for?  


 

Einstein: His Life and Universe

Einstein: His Life and Universe
MSRP: $17.95
Your Price: $12.21
Savings: $ 5.74 ( 32% )
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Simon & Schuster
Buy Einstein: His Life and Universe
 

Accessories for your Einstein: His Life and Universe

The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made
Benjamin Franklin: An American Life
Einstein: His Life and Universe
 

Related Einstein: His Life and Universe Products

Universe and His Life Einstein:
Life Universe and Einstein: His
and Einstein: His Universe Life
Einstein: Life Universe and His
His Einstein: Life and Universe
 

Additional Einstein: His Life and Universe Information

By the author of the acclaimed bestseller Benjamin Franklin, this is the first full biography of Albert Einstein since all of his papers have become available.

How did his mind work? What made him a genius? Isaacson's biography shows how his scientific imagination sprang from the rebellious nature of his personality. His fascinating story is a testament to the connection between creativity and freedom.

Based on newly released personal letters of Einstein, this book explores how an imaginative, impertinent patent clerk -- a struggling father in a difficult marriage who couldn't get a teaching job or a doctorate -- became the mind reader of the creator of the cosmos, the locksmith of the mysteries of the atom and the universe. His success came from questioning conventional wisdom and marveling at mysteries that struck others as mundane. This led him to embrace a morality and politics based on respect for free minds, free spirits, and free individuals.

These traits are just as vital for this new century of globalization, in which our success will depend on our creativity, as they were for the beginning of the last century, when Einstein helped usher in the modern age.

 

What Customers Say About Einstein: His Life and Universe:

Many dismissed his work such as his theory of relativism merely because Einstein was Jewish. Initially, Einstein eccentric personality made this problematic enough. Instead, it presents the right balance of science and the story of the man.In reading the book, one of the most surprising themes is the anti-semitism faced by Einstein. While the story of Albert Einstein's insatiable curiosity seems to have begun with a compass, navigating through the landscape of his quixotic life may not be an enjoyable terrain when presented in certain ways. Chapters alternate between science and personal life with slightly more emphasis on personal life. The potential shame of Einstein siring a daughter premaritally in this era in certain societies would have limited ability to attain recognition of his research.

For example while the fate of Lieserl Einstein is unknown, Isaacson gives a fair account.

Though thought to be a scientist, Einstein seemed to have a barometer for intolerance even at a young age.

As many people have, I have been waiting for a quality biogrpahy of Albert Einstein.

Walter Isaacson's biography does not overwhelm readers with scientific theories as to read like a physics book.

Isaacson explores the most likely events as relates to Lieserl in the book.

Certainly aiding in self-preservation, it also fostered his status as a citizen of the world first and foremost.

Initially distancing his heritage at a young age, he would eventually embrace it and become as much a part of his history as his theories.The book also explores territory that is often omitted in other biographies.

Like the compass that sparked Einstein curiosity as to how things work, this book is balance.

The positive reviews are well-founded.

Isaacson's writing style makes us feel like we know Einstein as he goes through his life. If you like Physics, Relativity, this won't be a dumbed down version. Indeed Walter Isaacson has effectively enticed the biography reader and the science reader interested.

In short, the author has a point of view, but he uses it to create a theme without letting it dominate or control the story. Chapters handle each of these areas one at time, rather than following strict chronological order. But those attitudes are presented gently, as Einstein "putters" and resists, and does not dominate or overpower the objective presentation of information. This is an excellent biography. If you hate science, this book will be problematc. I also liked the way the book handled Einstein's science, his personal life, and his public life outside of science.

The book does an excellent job of showing how Einstein became so prominent (he courted the press and guided his image, not to mention his genius) and the significant role public policy played in the second half of his life.

I started the book simply because I wanted to know more about Einstein, and I was right to do so.

With careful guidance and signposts from the author, that keep us from getting confused on the timing, I found this a very productive way to tell the story.

The author clearly is very fond of Einstein, and his thesis is that Einstein, and his genius, were defined by his inclination to flout convention and resist authority.

So we might learn what happened with his science in 1920-25, and only later learn what was happening in his personal life at that time.

While Einstein remains an icon, even this middle-aged professor did not have a full sense of the central role of Einstein in the social history of the first-half of the 20th Century.

He was REALLY big --- Muhammad Ali big --- for a period of decades.

I also thought the science explanations were good for this layman.

Otherwise, though, the explantions actually made me feel I understood what, say, relativity was about, though if you asked me to explain it minutes later, I could not have.All in all, an intresting and educational read.

It takes a lot of skill to write such a balanced narrative, and Isaacson pulls it off adroitly. I was amazed at how well he has explained Relativity and Quantum Physics, albeit at an extremely high level for the layman. Amazing work by Walter Isaacson. The narrative moves at a pleasant pace - from modest beginnings in Zurich, the magic year in Bern, to fame and authority in Berlin, and later in the US, to a poignant ending in Princeton. This helps appreciate the depth of Einstein's world. In one chapter he explains relativity of gravitational and intertial masses and the gist of the Bose-Einstein condensation, and in the next he talks about Einstein's personal God, philosophy and relationships with women. The race with David Hilbert to publish the General Relativity papers reads almost like a thriller.The only very minor gripe I had was that it is well known that he spent many futile years on his Unified Field Theory, but describing his every frustration with it makes the narrative a bit tedious in some chapters. Instead it could have focussed a bit more on his life in Princeton itself - I heard he had a brief interaction with John Nash - but that is not mentioned anywhere.We will never know details of the personal lives of Newton and Galileo and Euclid - so well written books like this are all the more valuable because this is the first time ever in the history of mankind that we get to follow the personal life Albert Einstein - the genius who we can proudly claim lived in 'our times'.

Einstein struggled to maintain close relationships with women and with his children, while simultaneously maintaining deep interpersonal respect and human concern. What are the real implications to people like me. It is a tribute to the flow of the biography that as a reader I consistently felt the simultaneous presence in Einstein's life of common foibles and uncommon genius. Isaacson provides a steady, linear narrative in smooth prose that follows Einstein from a rather unexceptional childhood through an odd but extraordinary early career (working in a patent office and on the fringes of academia while also having very normal struggles to establish a marriage and family) to a prolonged and fascinating period of intellectual celebrity. Having read many good reviews of this biography, and not knowing much about Einstein beyond media sound bites, I'd been looking forward to this read. His is unquestionably an interesting life that intersects with so much of importance to contemporary history--the rise of science, the changing face of Europe, America as an emerging power because it provided the sort of freedom that men like Einstein needed. But I still don't really know why it all matter outside of physics. I already knew the theory of relativity was important, and I knew some of the famous formulas, and the biography makes clear that the theories were revolutionary to science.

But I was never entirely convinced that quality alone was distinct enough to merit his fame. I'm glad the book didn't go into too much detail on the significance of Einstein's science--that would have lost me. And it was satisfying. The book's main thesis is that Einstein was a special scientist, and person, because he was able to go beyond the details and conceptualize new and powerful ways of understanding the world. His career was both incredibly productive and somewhat circuitous--somehow it was interesting to learn that Einstein was not always right, and he was fairly well aware of that fact.The biography's ability to portray Einstein as both normal and special made for good reading, but if anything may have erred to much on the side of emphasizing the normal. But I did want to know exactly why his science is so significant. So perhaps part of what made the second half of the book more interesting to me than the first was trying to figure this out--why exactly was Einstein such a celebrity as a scientist. But I still find myself wondering why Einstein alone has come to be associated with ultimate genius.

Buy Einstein: His Life and Universe
© 2006 - 2009 AZSources.com - Power Tools : Privacy Policy