Why Einstein Couldn’t Get a Job for 9 Years

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
  • Einstein had to settle as a lowly patent clerk. Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and get 20% off your annual premium subscription
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    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    1:09 Einstein fails to get into college
    1:40 Einstein’s grades at Zurich Polytechnic
    2:02 Einstein irritates his university professors
    2:51 Meeting Mileva Maric and illegitimate daughter Lieserl
    4:40 Einstein fails to get a job
    6:34 Working as a third-rate patent clerk
    8:18 The ‘miracle’ year in 1905 starting with the photoelectric effect paper
    9:10 Brownian Motion
    9:40 Special theory of relativity
    10:55 E = MC2
    11:26 Einstein still struggles to get a job following 1905 papers
    12:52 Falling in love with his Berlin cousin
    13:09 Einstein and wife divorce
    13:57 General theory of relativity
    15:22 How the sun warps starlight
    16:02 Einstein’s controversial character
    17:21 Dropping the atomic bomb
    18:25 Einstein troubled by quantum entanglement
    19:05 Struggle to find a uniform field theory
    Special thanks to Soojin Han for permission to feature her performance of Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 3
    Full video of the performance • Mozart Violin Concerto...
    Select images sourced from Alamy
    Sources:
    Lipoid Gymnasium, Einstein’s high school in Germany: Rufus46, CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/... via Wikimedia Commons
    Maxwell equations: FF-UK, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/... via Wikimedia Commons
    Swiss Patent Office in Bern Gidoca, CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    Italian cemetery where Hermann Einstein is buried: Paolobon140, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/... via Wikimedia Commons
    Rijksmuseum Boerhaave in Leiden, Netherlands showcasing Einstein’s fountain pen Museum Boerhaave, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/... via Wikimedia Commons
    NASA’s animation of how the sun warps starlight
    Animator: Scott Wiessinger
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 600

  • @Newsthink
    @Newsthink  Před 22 dny +27

    *What other biographies would you like to see?*
    Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and get 20% off your annual premium subscription

    • @Unknown31212
      @Unknown31212 Před 22 dny +6

      Nikola Tesla, I'm not sure if it's been covered already, im pretty new to the channel

    • @FunkyKnight96
      @FunkyKnight96 Před 22 dny +9

      Please make a video about John von Neumann. He was one of the smartest scientists of the 20th century in terms of raw intelligence. He was a polymath with a photographic memory who, at six years old, could divide two eight-digit numbers in his head and converse in Ancient Greek.

    • @FunkyKnight96
      @FunkyKnight96 Před 22 dny +3

      Geniuses of his era called him a genius. For example, George Dantzig, who accidentally solved two famous unsolved problems in statistics because he was late to class and thought they were homework. The story of von Neumann's genius goes like this:
      When George Dantzig brought von Neumann an unsolved problem in linear programming "as I would to an ordinary mortal", on which there had been no published literature, he was astonished when von Neumann said "Oh, that!", before offhandedly giving a lecture of over an hour, explaining how to solve the problem using the hitherto unconceived theory of duality.

    • @AndyNastas40403
      @AndyNastas40403 Před 22 dny

      Bram Stoker's Dracula, the iconic 1897 tale of a vampire from Transylvania, is often thought to be inspired by a formidable 15th-century governor from present-day Romania named Vlad the Impaler.= VLAD TzEPES fighting Ottoman Empire.

    • @onlytywun
      @onlytywun Před 21 dnem +1

      robert boyle or humphry davy

  • @paulg444
    @paulg444 Před 17 dny +269

    a lesson to every professor, the best and brightest, the most inquisitive and curious, are not necessarily the A students.

    • @rodneyh1947
      @rodneyh1947 Před 17 dny +35

      Grades are only a snapshot, peoples understanding and thought process can evolve overtime, a lot of people let the grades stop them from pursuing it without realizing they have potential.

    • @AndreasDelleske
      @AndreasDelleske Před 15 dny +7

      Note: May not apply if the teachers, professors are open-minded, inquisitive and curious themselves.

    • @winmen5279
      @winmen5279 Před 14 dny +9

      tbh, I think its more of a mistake on Einstein part than professors rejecting him. you're saying this from hindsight bias

    • @leexingha
      @leexingha Před 14 dny +1

      how come they could see if they dont have the eye for it?

    • @chiensyang
      @chiensyang Před 13 dny

      So the woke schools changing the grading standard were on the correct side of educational history?

  • @EcomCarl
    @EcomCarl Před 6 dny +6

    His resilience in the face of educational and professional setbacks is a powerful lesson on the importance of persistence and staying true to one's intellectual passions. 🔑

  • @Physicsforlife888
    @Physicsforlife888 Před 22 dny +143

    I Don't know why I am obsessed with Einstein but I loved him so much since I first heard about him
    He will always be in my mind for making me love physics.....

    • @Dragon-Slay3r
      @Dragon-Slay3r Před 21 dnem

      Atleast the eyes in pagan era of that time can't be used anymore
      If your happy and you know it clap your hands! 😂

    • @ossiedunstan4419
      @ossiedunstan4419 Před 18 dny

      Same , He lead me to my hypotheses on the Multi Multiverse.

    • @securityresearcher503
      @securityresearcher503 Před 18 dny

      @@ossiedunstan4419 multiverse is dogma and pseudo science....

    • @CheckmateSurvivor
      @CheckmateSurvivor Před 17 dny

      The "greatest scientist of all time" was a complete fraud. Please start using your brain.

    • @alexanderigasan8740
      @alexanderigasan8740 Před 16 dny +1

      Same! 😂

  • @qwertyuuytrewq825
    @qwertyuuytrewq825 Před 11 dny +4

    Some say it is hard to find job today )
    100 years ago it took 9 years and 4 revolutionary publications to get position according to your degree

  • @vit3869
    @vit3869 Před 20 dny +21

    One of your best documentaries yet. Longer, more in-depth=better.

    • @zetristan4525
      @zetristan4525 Před 17 dny +1

      Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger🎶

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

  • @JK360noscope
    @JK360noscope Před 20 dny +81

    This is probably the best description of success. "He did his most important work and nobody cared at all"
    It isn't till later when the implications of the success show up does the impact of the stone hitting the water send out the waves...

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      Because he was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

  • @tinytim71301
    @tinytim71301 Před 20 dny +18

    Beautifully done. Thank you.

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

    • @touchofgrey5372
      @touchofgrey5372 Před 5 dny

      @@VeganSemihCyprus33
      Uuuuh, that was heavy! I think you must be in the wrong page here; Perhaps 'Mr. Rogers' is closer to your IQ!

  • @petarswift5089
    @petarswift5089 Před 20 dny +54

    Little known fact. After he published the Special Relativity papers, he applied for a job in the Balkans in the Kingdom of Serbia as a university professor in Belgrade. But he was rejected because of the language barrier and not speaking Serbian.

    • @FPSIreland2
      @FPSIreland2 Před 17 dny +8

      Lucky Einstein

    • @tgrujic1487
      @tgrujic1487 Před 15 dny +4

      @@FPSIreland2such an unnecessary comment

    • @69Kevrod2012
      @69Kevrod2012 Před 11 dny

      Can't find any reference of it, also doesn't sound too credible given Serbia close ties to Germany at the time and Germany's general prestige in physics I doubt it would be much different than teaching physics in English nowadays!

    • @petarswift5089
      @petarswift5089 Před 11 dny +2

      It is a question for the collective West because it is about ignoring. Fortunately, Einstein's archives are still mostly located in the East, in Israel. In his early stage he was on good terms with the Serbian community through his first wife. You probably never heard that he got the idea for Str during a visit to Serbia and the Balkans. You should keep in mind that the United States met him for the first time only after his emigration and when he gained media attention from the national media there. The relations between Serbia and Germany at the beginning of the 20th century were better than the relations between Austria-Hungary and Serbia.

    • @69Kevrod2012
      @69Kevrod2012 Před 11 dny

      @@petarswift5089 yeah that's why I question your assertion that the language barrier was the reason he didn't teach in Serbia, which you didn't address weirdly!

  • @Martincohenphoto
    @Martincohenphoto Před 15 dny +8

    What a lovely and well made video! One of the best I have seen on Albert Einstein, and a LOT of documentaries were made on his life and his legacy.

  • @jann9507
    @jann9507 Před 20 dny +11

    Thank you for a fantastic presentation;
    Loved the infographics and photographs which were very apt to the topic.
    Please keep them coming!!

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

  • @singing-sands
    @singing-sands Před 21 dnem +106

    Don’t dismiss Mileva Maric’s contribution to Einstein’s work so easily. She did much more than type up his papers! The very fact she was the only woman classmate showed the extent to which she was valued in her own right. After marriage they had at least two more children but she suffered from severe post partum depression. I disagree that Mileva was ugly. After Einstein grew tired of her illness he left and married his first cousin. I would never call his cousin ugly, but her picture is readily available.

    • @epajarjestys9981
      @epajarjestys9981 Před 18 dny

      Yeah, Einstein's cousin-wife was actually quite an ugly hag compared to Mileva Maric. He should have stayed loyal to Mileva. Probably would have come up with a grand unified theory then. Also shouldn't have told the US of A to build a nuke.
      I'm gonna build a time machine and tell him about it.

    • @adrianc.4982
      @adrianc.4982 Před 18 dny

      A😮

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před 16 dny +4

      He stole her ideas !

    • @Amilakasun1
      @Amilakasun1 Před 16 dny +14

      @@shantishanti1949 yeah just like marie curie stole from her husband.

    • @Minptahhathor
      @Minptahhathor Před 16 dny

      Yeah the Disney series was very eye opening and quite saddening.

  • @BounceIO
    @BounceIO Před 19 dny +6

    Incredible and inspiring thank you, was just feeling like shit this morning, and this picked me right back up.

    • @roman_one2150
      @roman_one2150 Před 5 dny +2

      Same here... Years without getting things done as dreamt!
      Reminding me that Einstein himself had to struggle that hard And in an almost humilliating way Made me Feel Refreshing Energy!
      Thank You, Thank You Very Much!

  • @adityasunani3265
    @adityasunani3265 Před 17 dny +1

    Fascination video! I really loved it!! BTW, your videos are amazing!! I really liked most of the videos and it really gives valuable learning!!

  • @jazzman2516
    @jazzman2516 Před 16 dny +5

    A testament to the complexity of the human mind, and the ridiculousness of the modern educational system.

  • @coastofkonkan
    @coastofkonkan Před 20 dny +26

    How many genuiuses go unnoticed & how many go waste due to politics or inter personal issues or even plain discrimination

    • @yannickclaes90
      @yannickclaes90 Před 13 dny

      How many charlatans get praised by the media as demi-gods. Looking at you Elon!

    • @mimszanadunstedt441
      @mimszanadunstedt441 Před 12 dny

      Would you rather score a 50 on every test, or a 100 on half, and a 0 on half?

    • @growtocycle6992
      @growtocycle6992 Před 12 dny +7

      Autism sucks...

    • @yannickclaes90
      @yannickclaes90 Před 12 dny

      How many charlatans are being praised by the media? Looking at you Elon!

    • @yannickclaes90
      @yannickclaes90 Před 12 dny

      @@growtocycle6992 ???

  • @Eagerwerewolf
    @Eagerwerewolf Před 22 dny +86

    I'm really curious what he said at last, the nurse didn't know german, it will probably remain a mystery forever

    • @hxhdfjifzirstc894
      @hxhdfjifzirstc894 Před 22 dny +15

      It was some sort of equation, but the nurse was not a mathematician.

    • @gonfaraway
      @gonfaraway Před 22 dny +3

      Probably?

    • @centuraxaum5951
      @centuraxaum5951 Před 20 dny +4

      So he's not cared enough at the end? Probably they should have had a recorder near him all the time.

    • @gonfaraway
      @gonfaraway Před 20 dny +9

      @@centuraxaum5951 should've would've could've

    • @pskocik
      @pskocik Před 20 dny

      Perhaps he did unlock the secret to the theory of everything and told it to the nurse, who, like the world, was not ready for it. We may never know.

  • @PAKARErst
    @PAKARErst Před 17 dny +2

    You are brilliant at what you do. Top notch.

  • @costafilh0
    @costafilh0 Před 2 dny +2

    People: "Why don't you get a job?"
    Me: "Einstein couldn’t get a job for nine years!"

  • @bhaveshsuthar4423
    @bhaveshsuthar4423 Před 22 dny +6

    Love these scientist docuseries

  • @Omnipotent_Science
    @Omnipotent_Science Před 22 dny +2

    Ngl I wish your channel had more subscribers because your videos are so insightful and interesting 😭

  • @kaustubhpandey1395
    @kaustubhpandey1395 Před 22 dny +12

    I love your channel
    I love the historical origins and significance of science
    You unfold it beautifully

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

    • @ronmullick253
      @ronmullick253 Před 8 dny

      @@VeganSemihCyprus33 Ah the internet.Where people can puff themselves up by calling a genius a fruad.And then present a sophomoric,useless and pathetic video to prove their lack of intellect.

  • @szlvid6
    @szlvid6 Před 15 dny +1

    Thank you! Very interesting!🌱

  • @mzimmer1751
    @mzimmer1751 Před 20 dny

    Very nice video, as always

  • @Arugula100
    @Arugula100 Před 12 dny +2

    This is a marvelous presentation of science, history, and Einstein. I love your presentation style and narration! I wish i can be tour assistant to learn how to create this kind of educational videos. Where does one learn about these processes of clipping vidros, photos, and stringing them into a story with voice recordings?

  • @davidcolombier5673
    @davidcolombier5673 Před 15 dny

    Great video and great explanations.

  • @rohank9292
    @rohank9292 Před 18 dny +2

    I've heard of several different explanations of Einstein's Theory of Relativity since a very long time now without ever understanding it at all. Today, I heard you make a key comment in your explanation of the Einstein's free fall and accelerating upward elevator scenario that both gravity and acceleration are one and the same thing. Though I've known this concept for a long time now ever since having studied about it in high school, the fact that this leads to the explanation of Einstein's theory of Relativity is a revelation for me in its own. Now all that remains is to learn the math used for describing acceleration in curved geometric spaces and then I should be able to understand the theory that has evaded my comprehension for 25 years already now.
    Thank you very much for providing this insight.

    • @epajarjestys9981
      @epajarjestys9981 Před 18 dny +1

      I recommend Prof. Frederic Schuller's lecture series for the Heraeus Winter school on gravity and light. It's here on CZcams. Best, most understandable introduction to GR that I've seen. The professor won some award for his teaching skill.

    • @zemm9003
      @zemm9003 Před 17 dny

      ​@@epajarjestys9981 the best way to learn is by reading the original papers of Einstein since they are very detailed and he was an amazing writer.

  • @OpenAITutor
    @OpenAITutor Před 18 dny +2

    Great summation of Einstein's life and work.

  • @whitehorse1959
    @whitehorse1959 Před 15 dny

    A wonderful video production, thanks. Subscribed.

  • @sammypwn6732
    @sammypwn6732 Před 19 dny +3

    Hi Cindy, I love your videos and I'm wondering if you can make a bio video on mathematicians like Abel, Euclid,Euler or Gauss

  • @bluedale6563
    @bluedale6563 Před 10 dny

    Thank you for this

  • @nHans
    @nHans Před 19 dny +15

    The elevator animation is wrong. It shows the elevator moving with constant speed after a brief initial acceleration-that is, a real-life elevator. Whereas Einstein-clearly not an engineer-imagined elevators that were constantly accelerating, whether moving upward or downward. He wouldn't have discovered General Relativity in a real-life elevator.

    • @i2keepitrealInreseach
      @i2keepitrealInreseach Před 16 dny

      A proud Indian engineer 😂

    • @gary_rumain_you_peons
      @gary_rumain_you_peons Před 15 dny

      Elevators cannot constantly accelerate downwards.

    • @nHans
      @nHans Před 14 dny

      ​@@gary_rumain_you_peons Real-life elevators don't, naturally. There's air, and eventually, the ground itself. An ideal elevator for Einstein would be a nightmare in the real world. 🤣

    • @seditt5146
      @seditt5146 Před 14 dny

      @@i2keepitrealInreseach LMFAO, Ya right, he really is proud of that stupid shit he just said LOL. Made my day.

    • @USGrant21st
      @USGrant21st Před 10 dny

      @@gary_rumain_you_peons "Elevators cannot constantly accelerate downwards." -- they can, when the breaks go bad 😂

  • @user-wr4yl7tx3w
    @user-wr4yl7tx3w Před 19 dny +37

    This is really well presented and narrated.

    • @ronmullick253
      @ronmullick253 Před 14 dny

      Totally agree.One tiny critique.The narrator should look into voice lesson.Her voice is naturally beautiful though.

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Před 12 dny

      Really? He was a “pacifist” but he was totally behind Israel…

    • @uzefulvideos3440
      @uzefulvideos3440 Před 11 dny

      @@ronmullick253 the voice is AI generated 😁

    • @ronmullick253
      @ronmullick253 Před 10 dny

      @@uzefulvideos3440 That does make sense.Maybe it is the disinterested quality in her voice.

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

  • @rajibalam9748
    @rajibalam9748 Před 10 dny

    Loved this documentary!

  • @DannyLeenders
    @DannyLeenders Před 10 dny +2

    I like your voice😊 it's clear and calm.

  • @anon5041
    @anon5041 Před 7 dny

    I like that you put ad at the end of the video. I watched to reciprocate that respect

  • @R.K146
    @R.K146 Před 21 dnem +2

    Have 😢 been searching for this video ,since a year .

  • @ivanbeshkov1718
    @ivanbeshkov1718 Před 10 dny +1

    In 1925 Einstein visited Buenos Aires, in Montevideo he met with philosopher Carlos Vaz Ferreira. He read Upton Sinclair novels. Surprising that he had so many extracurricular activities.

  • @tearsien
    @tearsien Před 13 dny +3

    His story could've ended many many times. I'm glad einstein was so mentally durable.

  • @brianletter3545
    @brianletter3545 Před 17 dny +1

    A very good short 'Bio' of Einstein!
    Thanks a lot.
    From someone who was a very happy 'Patent Clerk' for 16y.

  • @mkjyt1
    @mkjyt1 Před 22 dny +1

    this was great!

  • @crazygermanviper
    @crazygermanviper Před 9 dny +1

    Nice how this intimate emotional climax in the end is immediately soulcrushingly devastated by an add for brilliant. Now I am depressed again.

  • @stevenharris2064
    @stevenharris2064 Před 16 dny

    Well done.

  • @justpengy1024
    @justpengy1024 Před 22 dny

    I love you’re videos, i really love these things but i couldn’t find any good explanation about it. But you do it just perfectly that even a 10 year old can understand😊

  • @ScoutSniper3124
    @ScoutSniper3124 Před 17 dny +3

    When Einstein's fiance complained about his not being ready to marry he developed his Theory of Relative Stability.

  • @PearlmanYeC
    @PearlmanYeC Před 12 dny

    nice presentation.

  • @bobmckenna5511
    @bobmckenna5511 Před 2 dny

    Marvelous presentation. Superb narrator. This was the first I recall hearing of his musicianship. High marks, all around.

  • @michaelblankenau6598
    @michaelblankenau6598 Před 13 dny +3

    The world is grateful that Einstein’s parents didn’t name him Frank .

  • @Zirui.roblox
    @Zirui.roblox Před 10 dny +2

    So he did find the field equation at this death bed, but the nurse didnt understood german 😮

  • @mr.thermistr9903
    @mr.thermistr9903 Před 22 dny +1

    Please make a video on Dr. Satyendra Nath Bose as he was father of Quantum Statistics.

  • @UmarDeka7
    @UmarDeka7 Před dnem

    What a great video, I remember studying Einstein for long hours and the dopamine spike I used to get is similar to what I got from the video.

  • @liyostudio8112
    @liyostudio8112 Před 22 dny

    Video editing best ❤🎉

  • @THEScottCampbell
    @THEScottCampbell Před 12 dny +2

    Al got great PR. He wasn't a "pacifist"; he was lazy and selfish, as demonstrated by his treatment of his wife. National service could easily be served as a cook or a clerk but there was no money in it. His arrogant treatment of Georges Le Maitres and his "Big Bang Theory" makes Einstein's understanding of cosmology a joke, The American press loved him. He was a one trick pony.

  • @corvinyt
    @corvinyt Před 21 dnem +1

    Loved this piece on Einstein. 🙏

  • @geneballay9590
    @geneballay9590 Před dnem

    Very interesting. Even with a PhD in theoretical physics since 1976 I learned a lot, and appreciate the work put into the video, and then sharing.

  • @danmarquez3971
    @danmarquez3971 Před 13 dny

    Oh, wonderful history; it provides lessons in many eye-opening facets of psychology, life, and dreams. Thank you!!

  • @MusicLover-bp2cc
    @MusicLover-bp2cc Před 12 dny

    Thank you.

  • @toddmiller6100
    @toddmiller6100 Před 10 dny

    What AI models and agent setup are you using?

  • @rolandnelson6722
    @rolandnelson6722 Před 11 dny +1

    Physicists in his time (and still now) weren’t interested in how the universe worked, they were primarily interested in WHO is saying this is correct.
    Without Max Planck vouching for Einstein, Einstein would not have ever got a decent job or be known.

  • @Zamicol
    @Zamicol Před 15 dny +1

    I believe there is somewhat an error in the "Einstein's Nine-Year Struggle to Find a Job" video.
    In 1905 Einstein published four, not five papers. The video says that there were two concerning molecules. (Wikipedia agrees with the "four" papers.) There was one paper covering molecules/atoms/Brownian motion and his doctoral thesis, which isn't always considered "a paper" and also had a significant error. It was also his second attempt, his first being in 1901, so it wasn't necessarily novel.
    His 1905 doctoral thesis is usually not included because there was an error in his calculations that was later corrected after experimentation showed that his value was likely incorrect. Years later a student provided a fix. It was also likely a revision and extension of his 1901 work.
    Einstein had another doctoral thesis in 1901 which was rejected/withdrawn, also concerning the kinetic theory of gasses, but that paper is lost to history.

  • @royjcrump2329
    @royjcrump2329 Před 22 dny

    Sweet moments in time, Thank you, you have a special gift, details, your got all details. This video is the best..Thank you,
    Always in space and time.

  • @zetristan4525
    @zetristan4525 Před 17 dny +6

    Super presentation. And no glaring errors, while explaining simply for the public.

    • @andrewlewis4047
      @andrewlewis4047 Před 12 dny

      While there was clearly a few errors that would set a scientist back she done good enough for me to prefer over any news media outlet. 😂 🎉

    • @zetristan4525
      @zetristan4525 Před 12 dny

      @@andrewlewis4047 Which errors most noteworthy? I am a physicist: did I enthusiastically forget to critique?🤓

  • @user-ii3rs3wo1v
    @user-ii3rs3wo1v Před 20 dny +1

    Well, the Einstein-Szilard letter from August 1939 didn't cause much action in the US. The immediate consequences were a relatively small research program. In fact, it was the Frisch-Peierls memorandum from March 1940 (which in historical review already contained the schematic of a blueprint for the gun-type design of the atomic bomb) which led to the activity of the MAUD committee and the Tube Alloys project in the UK later on, way before the start of the Manhattan project. And it was Mark Oliphant (a guy from Australia, who was a member of the MAUD committee and who then primarily worked on the new RADAR technology, and who finally got lucky to have Rudolf Peierls sitting nearby in the same building (who could solve one or two difficult problems for Oliphant - despite the fact that Peierls and Frisch didn't posses security clearance at that time ;-)) visiting the US in August 1941 who reminded the scientific community in the US about the existence of the MAUD committee report. That report had been sent to the US before, but Lyman Briggs (director of the US Uranium Committee) had put that report into his safe. And had not shown it to any member of his own committee. There was meeting then on 26th of August 194 with Mark Oliphant and the Uranium Committee to discuss the issue. Finally, Oliphant met with his friend Ernest Lawrence on September 23th in Berkeley, where Lawrence did receive a copy of the Frisch-Peierls memorandum. And Lawrence then informed Robert Oppenheimer to check the figures. But this it not the end of the story. Mark Oliphant convinced Ernest Lawrence to convert his 37-inch cyclotron into a giant mass spectrometer for electromagnetic isotope separation. So, in the end, it was some guy from Australia and not the the (first) Einstein-Szilard letter who caused the action. IMHO, that famous Einstein-Szilard letter gets a little bit too much attention. Probably because of the name of Albert Einstein in it. ;-)

  • @javastream5015
    @javastream5015 Před 20 dny +2

    I need a similar job to solve the P-NP problem!

  • @gwickle1685
    @gwickle1685 Před 13 dny

    Thank you

  • @barryzeeberg3672
    @barryzeeberg3672 Před 13 dny

    14:17 I am not sure what it means to "feel your own weight"? Does this mean that your legs will "feel" that they are "working" more to hold you up? I guess I am curious as to which part/muscles of your body, coupled to which part of your sensory system/CNS, is involved?

  • @leoisanerd
    @leoisanerd Před 22 dny +8

    ok but what about his mewing streak

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

  • @MarkusHJordi
    @MarkusHJordi Před 9 dny

    At 1:22 Aarau is a mid-sized town, capital of the canton of Aargau, not a village

  • @Makoto03
    @Makoto03 Před 22 dny

    Great video on Einstein.

  • @randelbrooks
    @randelbrooks Před 12 dny +3

    One lengthy paper I read about him detailed how he and the people around him successfully use publicity and what you might call a bit of ShowBusiness to make him so famous compared to other more important physicists. His mathematics was rather poor and he could not get a job on the Manhattan project. But he had made himself very famous so when teller and Szilard put together the letter to Roosevelt about nuclear energy they got Einstein to sign it because of his name.
    His family still promotes all of this quite jealously.

    • @nomad7734
      @nomad7734 Před 11 dny +2

      Yup... that is the truth

    • @jimbonater
      @jimbonater Před 13 minutami

      Did these other mathematicians come up with such ground breaking theories? No and that's why they are forgotten. Many are good at math, few can come up with such revolutionary ideas.

  • @varunnikam
    @varunnikam Před 20 dny

    I love anything and everything about Sir Einstein.

  • @timeflex
    @timeflex Před 13 dny

    The initial formula was m = E/(c^2). The first attempt to explain mass.

  • @bibiayube677
    @bibiayube677 Před 17 dny

    We are very lucky to have this genius came into our world imagine if we never had him

    • @robertpotvin8872
      @robertpotvin8872 Před 17 dny

      the only real application of his theories is the nuclear BOMB,,,,,,the famous E=MC2,,,,another one is,,,the correction of clocks needed for fast and far satellites ,due to THE GENERAL RELATIVITY ,,this at 1 sec for a 100 YEARS,LOLL,the rest is only triyng to explain what is going on in the UNIVERSE,,

  • @rlkinnard
    @rlkinnard Před dnem

    Gregor Mendel wrote papers equally ground breaking on genetics hoping to secure a position as a lab tech at Charles University; he did not make it.

  • @gregorysagegreene
    @gregorysagegreene Před 7 dny

    At the bottom of my life yet again,
    it's good to listen to something pure and positive.

  • @mauricefisher1654
    @mauricefisher1654 Před 22 dny +2

    Thanks

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  Před 22 dny +2

      Thanks so much Maurice, this is really appreciated!

  • @derived12
    @derived12 Před 12 dny +1

    Anyone connecting Terrence Howard, magnetism, relativity ?

  • @SingingDworld7
    @SingingDworld7 Před 2 dny

    That describes the situation of our world when there are no free platforms for the geniuses to share their ideas and today the situation has gone much worse in contrast to what it apparently appears.

  • @1997CWR
    @1997CWR Před 18 dny

    Special relativity can describe acceleration. You just take the second derivative w.r.t. to the time in the inertial frame.

  • @danmimis4576
    @danmimis4576 Před 22 dny +2

    Great dude, able to imagine some insane thought experiments. He was also lucky: when his math was wrong the measurements weren't made (remember 1914 in Russia and WW1?) and when he desperately needed to right his math Hilbert was a gentleman. And if I'm not wrong he didn't deliver much in his last 40 years ...

  • @TerryBollinger
    @TerryBollinger Před 15 dny

    Interesting, thank you. Also, I am curious: Did you discover anything about how Hermann Minkowski treated Einstein before Einstein became famous?

  • @user-jw3vy3kf5f
    @user-jw3vy3kf5f Před 12 dny

    'Space and Time are products of our thinking not a situation within which we live'

  • @botvenikmikail-qv6od
    @botvenikmikail-qv6od Před 15 dny

    We are all given talent
    ..but time only decides when the time comes...❤

  • @juiuice
    @juiuice Před 15 dny +1

    its nice knowing Einstein struggled getting a job/getting his foot on the door, too 😔

  • @alanvonweltin6820
    @alanvonweltin6820 Před 15 dny

    Off topic but curious as to where the narrator grew up as I have never heard the word "pollen" pronounced this way before - at about 9:30 in the video regarding Brownian motion

    • @gary_rumain_you_peons
      @gary_rumain_you_peons Před 15 dny

      Almost like she's saying Poland. But the way she pronounces water suggests that she's an American (East coast but not North-East).

  • @shauryaaher1579
    @shauryaaher1579 Před 21 dnem +1

    Einstein actually thought of a person falling from a building…that was the happiest thought of his life.

  • @rocroc
    @rocroc Před 5 dny

    One thing I recall reading in Einstein's English version of "Relativity: the Special and General Theory" was a comment he made about children. He recalled that every school child (German) knew the speed of light. When I read that I thought the education system he grew up with was different than mine. I don't recall ever learning about the speed of light in elementary school and not until much later. If I heard it, I don't recall hearing it and it would only have been mentioned in passing. Whatever shortcomings Einstein attributed to German education, they were able to make some significant contributions to scientific thought and technological development and still do today. That isn't to say I didn't like my American education, I would like to have had both.

    • @jimbonater
      @jimbonater Před 4 minutami

      I was born in 1970 and my father told me about E=mc2 when I was only 7. I was fascinated by this and then looked up the speed of light in an encyclopedia. Then of course facts like light taking roughly 11 minutes to travel from the sun to earth ect. learning things like this early can really open you mind.

  • @bruceincremona9241
    @bruceincremona9241 Před 22 dny +4

    Albert einstein had OCD. As do many scientists and entertainers to this day. Can you imagine if he were born in our time? And they were shoving drugs down his throat to help with his OCD! My youngest son, who is a man now, was borderline OCD when he was in grade and high school. All they did was try to convince me to get him Adderall. I wasn't going for any of that, especially when two Psychiatrist told me told me it wasn't necessary. They wanted me to give him drugs to make their job easier. Not everyone learns at the same pace.

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Před 22 dny +6

      You have no idea what OCD is or what OCD drugs do.
      Let me guess. Also a anti vacciner?

    • @perc-ai
      @perc-ai Před 20 dny

      @@AL-lh2ht the avg anti vacciner knows more about chemistry and drugs than probably the vacciners...

    • @bwfvc7770
      @bwfvc7770 Před 19 dny +2

      @@AL-lh2ht You've obviously had too many with an attendant charisma bypass.

    • @VeganSemihCyprus33
      @VeganSemihCyprus33 Před 9 dny

      He was a fraud. Now let's watch something that actually teaches some crucial wisdom 👉 The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🔥

    • @jimbonater
      @jimbonater Před minutou

      @@AL-lh2ht Your kidding right?

  • @CharlesHarpolek4vud
    @CharlesHarpolek4vud Před 7 dny

    Imagine the training of the mind that would come with having to deeply evaluate all of the various incoming applications for "copyright" type protection----- and that was one of einsteins's jobs. There is a world extending function of just reading the outside of envelopes that come from everywhere in the post office.
    I did indexing of widely varied specialized research papers they're requiring me to know something about the content in order to index them. That was terrific exposure to many different deeply researched ideas.

  • @kellyem33
    @kellyem33 Před 17 dny +1

    lorentz came up wtih E= MC2, albert understood it.

  • @RP-le1fp
    @RP-le1fp Před 2 dny

    Haven't had a job in 76 years and don't ever want one.

  • @muhammadyahyahadi9337
    @muhammadyahyahadi9337 Před 19 dny +3

    biographies of 'Al Kuarizmi' who invented algebra(modern math)

  • @Lovin_It
    @Lovin_It Před 7 hodinami

    17:21 J. Oppenheimer on the right, I reckon. Einstein's travel diaries were discovered in 2018; I recall he noted that the Chinese were unable and/or hopeless at math.

  • @janklaas6885
    @janklaas6885 Před 22 dny

    📍13:57

  • @benjaminpadilla4857
    @benjaminpadilla4857 Před 6 hodinami

    The same thing they saying about Terrence Howard were the same thing they were saying about Einstein.

  • @cratecruncher4974
    @cratecruncher4974 Před 18 dny +4

    So all his greatest works were in that patent office while married to whats her name who he met in college AND gave his prize money to. I wonder how much "editing" she did?

    • @nomad7734
      @nomad7734 Před 11 dny +1

      It maybe her work.

    • @singing-sands
      @singing-sands Před 22 hodinami

      ⁠@@nomad7734she contributed much more for which she does not get credit. He promised to share his Nobel prize money.

  • @freddypelo
    @freddypelo Před 11 dny +1

    I know this video is to embellish and glorify A. Einstein for his extraordinary achievements in maths and physics, but there was a hiatus in his trajectory as a human being when he wrote a letter of conditions to Mileva. The letter was of extreme disdain towards her and his children. Meaning that we are 2 sides of a coin, stupid at times.

  • @0MoTheG
    @0MoTheG Před 4 dny

    Proof that the straight path to where the future saw you going never existed.
    Only lucky accidents (meeting the right teacher) plus persistence lead to those outcomes we profit from so much.

  • @user-tp9yy3dc4y
    @user-tp9yy3dc4y Před 17 hodinami

    It would be greatest lie I ever told if I said I could understand all this. It all makes me feel like an ant trying to recite Shakespeare.

  • @roseperozzi6730
    @roseperozzi6730 Před 10 dny +1

    His First wife was the mathematical genius…..she taught him and developed the time concept during a train ride, which she shared with him…

    • @mark9294
      @mark9294 Před 9 dny

      People would love to believe that, but no.

    • @singing-sands
      @singing-sands Před 22 hodinami

      @@mark9294why would they love to believe that if it is true? Strange. Patronizing.