Relativity is where you or something is in relation to something else. Two examples are 1. If you are sitting in a railway carriage and another train is standing next to you. You see that the other train is passing you as you move forward, when in fact it is the other train that is moving and not your train. 2. A train is comming along a track as you stand on the platform. It has to travel 200 meters before it comes to a stop. A man in a carriage walks the length of the carriage which is 25 meters long. As far at he is concerned he has only travelled 25 meters but you know he has travelled 200 meters. It is all relative my friend, all relative.
Albert Einsien
well this is a hard question to answer. when albert Einstein created the theory of relitivity it was unheard of. so using e has does and mchammer as she has the answer is an absoulute -4
yes because of the theroy of relitivity
A General Theory of Love was created in 2000.
This question is confusing/mixing-up two different scientific theories, and should be worded something like:"What is Darwin's theory of evolution?"'The Origin of Species' (1859), a book by Charles Darwin explaining his theory of evolution provoked great controversy: by casting doubt on the historical accuracy of the biblical accounts of Creation it caused many believers to question their faith in Christianity.Another scientist, Albert Einstein, proposed a "General theory of relativity" that has nothing to do with Darwin's theory!Technically correct attribution of theories aside, Darwin's theory of 'relativity' is that all living things are relatives!
There's no such thing as an official theory. The classical theory of general relativity is the one that Einstein invented.
the theory of evolution, general relativity, quantum theory
The general Chaos Theory is plausible given its unpredictability in complex systems.
The General theory of relativity primarily applies to particles as they accelerate, particularly due to gravitation
Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity was published in 1915.
Theory of general relativity - Albert Einstein (1916)
A theory.