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The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein
Volume 6, The Berlin Years: Writings, 1914-1917
Edited by A. J. Kox, Martin J. Klein, and Robert Schulmann
650 pages
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996
ISBN: 0-691-01086-2
Presented in this volume are Albert Einstein's writings
from his
arrival in Berlin in the spring of 1914 to take up his new position at
the Prussian Academy of Sciences through the end of 1917. During these
years he completed the general theory of relativity--the relativistic
theory of gravitation--and this was surely the high point of his
scientific life. His writings on relativity in this volume range from
general treatments of the theory to detailed calculations of specific
consequences and his first attempt at a relativistic account of
cosmology. They also include his popular exposition of the special and
general theories, first published in 1917 and still a valuable account
for the general reader.
As soon as the difficulties on the path to general
relativity had
been overcome, Einstein returned to the riddles of the quantum theory.
His major clarification of the quantum theory of radiation appears
here along with his lesser known contribution to the formulation of
quantum conditions. This volume also contains the papers describing
Einstein's only experimental investigation, a study of Ampère's
molecular currents, which he carried out with the Dutch physicist W.
J. de Haas.
Before the beginning of World War I, Einstein had never
expressed
his views on nonscientific subjects. Yet one of his first reactions to
this previously unthinkable general war was to sign an "Appeal to
Europeans" urging an immediate end to hostilities.
See the Introduction for
a
summary of this volume.
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