Book Review — Einstein: The Man And His Mind

in #einsteinlast year

Science books aren’t generally seasonal. Readers don’t need to know about, say, “forever chemicals” or Homo Naladi in advance of Thanksgiving or the 4th of July more than they do at any other time of year. This means that, as a reviewer of science books, I have not ever started an article with the classic phrase ,“Just in time for Christmas.”

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Here goes.

Just in time for Christmas comes an enormous (4.4 pounds, 10 x 1.25 x 13 inches), beautiful coffee table book about Albert Einstein, his private life, and his many theories, some world-changing, some early busts. I’ve already decided to whom I will give my copy this Christmas, and I’m going to have to lug the thing on a long train ride to do so. I will do so gladly, that’s how gorgeous and effective I think the book is.

The book in question is Einstein: The Man and his Mind. Written for non-scientists, it consists of autographed photos, papers, articles, and quotes as collected by Gregory S. Berger, MD, and kept in is private collection in Chapel Hill, NC. Dr. Berger wrote the book in concert with Michael DiRuggiero, the owner of the Manhattan Rare Book Company, which DiRuggiero co-founded and where he specializes in books about the history of science and, in particular, about Albert Einstein. Hanoch Gutfreund, the Andre Aisenstadt Chair in theoretical physics and past president president at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, contributed the book’s Forward. (Einstein was one of the founding fathers at the university. All royalties from the book will be donated to the university’s Albert Einstein Archives.) Significant credit for this book also belongs to book designer Yolando Cuomo, an American artist who has, over the years, collaborated with Richard Avedon, Paul Simon, Laurie Anderson, Twyla Tharp, and many others including the estate of Diane Arbus. Her design and execution of the physical book is simultaneously respectful and emotionally and intellectually moving.

PROMOTED

In my experience, books about Einstein quickly become a blur of equations, dates, and Germanic names. With this book, my eye was drawn to compelling photos and to lightly delivered anecdotes, some of which explain the progression of Einstein’s ideas and some of which merely point out what a quirky fellow he was. For example, when Einstein was visiting California in the early 1930s, he met Charlie Chaplain. Apparently, the encounter between the two extraordinary personages went in part like this:

Einstein: What I most admire about your art is your universality. You don’t say a word, yet the world understands you.

Chaplin: True. But your glory is even greater! The whole world admires you, even though they don’t understand a word of what you say.

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In Einstein: The Mind and the Man, the flow of photos and information is divided into chapters that mark decades, though the first chapter covers the years 1890-1920. The year 1905 may have been the most extraordinary of them all for Einstein. Often referred to as his “miracle year,” in 1905 he published four seminal papers: In the third of those four papers he introduced the special theory of relativity, which described the structure of space-time. In the fourth, he tweaked the ideas of the third and specifically equated mass and energy. By doing so he created what has long been referred to as “the most famous scientific equation of all time”: E=MC2.

After his miracle year, Einstein worked with various contributors to push his special theory of relativity even further, ultimately making assertions in 1916 about relativity on an astronomical scale. The resulting “general relativity theory” vitally informs astrophysics and space research to this day.

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