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The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein
Volume 9, The Berlin Years: Correspondence January 1919 - April 1920
Edited by Diana Kormos Buchwald, Robert Schulmann, József Illy,
Daniel J. Kennefick, and Tilman Sauer.
Virgina Iris Holmes, A.J.Kox, and Ze'ev Rosenkranz, Associate Editors.
Rudy Hirschmann and Osik Moses, Editorial Assistants.
832 pages, 38 halftones.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004
ISBN: 0-691-12088-9
The present volume, set in the turbulent post-World War
I period,
finds Einstein awaiting news of the 1919 British eclipse expedition to
test the general relativistic prediction of the deflection of starlight
by the sun. With the expedition's success, he becomes the first science
celebrity of our age. Deeply interested in the other, stellar redshift
test of his theory, Einstein supports astronomers engaged in
experimental work on the issue. Piqued by early suggestions of a
unified field theory, he ponders how to unify gravitation and
electromagnetic field theory and also works to resolve contradictions
between the new quantum physics and relativity. His open-minded
exchanges with colleagues may challenge his later image as the stubborn
critic of quantum mechanics.
We see Einstein deeply engaged in
discussing social and political issues, participating in humanitarian
efforts, and intervening on behalf of intellectuals condemned to death
after the fall of the Bavarian Soviet republic. He faced anti-Semitic
outbursts, reflected increasingly on his own identity as a Jew and
assisted in efforts toward the establishment of the Hebrew University.
As an internationalist opponent of war, and a German-speaking Swiss
citizen whose renown was sealed by the Englishman Eddington's
confirmation of relativity, Einstein mitigated postwar hostility toward
German scholars.
Correspondence with family and friends documents
his divorce, remarriage to his cousin, and his closeness to his two
sons. Notwithstanding evidence in newly uncovered material concerning
efforts to lure Einstein back to Switzerland, and also to the
Netherlands, Einstein, entertaining high hopes for the young Weimar
Republic, remained in Berlin. This volume reveals new facets of
Einstein as he constructively participated in German and European
scientific, academic, and cultural life.
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