They fundamentally changed the way people lived and thoughts...
The industrial revolution transformed society with technological advancements and urbanization. Karl Marx's ideas influenced the rise of socialist movements and critiques of capitalism. Sigmund Freud's work popularized psychoanalysis and shaped modern psychology. Charles Darwin's theory of evolution revolutionized biology and our understanding of the natural world. Albert Einstein's theories of relativity reshaped physics and led to advances in modern science.
he was Albert Einstein
In 1916, towards the end of the Industrial Revolution, Albert Einstein published perhaps his most famous work which we refer to as "The Theory of Relativity."
Albert Einstein
Einstein completed the theory in November 1915 and published it the following Spring.
Andrea Gabor has written: 'Einstein's Wife' -- subject(s): Biography, Celebrities, Spouses, Wives 'The capitalist philosophers' -- subject(s): Biography, Corporations, History, Industrial management, Industrial psychologists, Industrial sociologists, Influence
Revalint brilent men
The writings and ideas of Freud, Darwin, Einstein, and Marx
I don't have a Britannica here to check out my hunch. But if it were me, I'd look in the following volumes: -- ' E ' for "Einstein" -- ' R ' for "Relativity" -- ' P ' for "Photoelectric Effect"
Elsa Lowenthal was Albert Einstein's second wife. She was a cousin who nursed him back to health following a serious illness in 1917. Elsa taught Albert the importance of health.
The following are some of Einstein's hardships: sickness, religious strife, divorce, and mother dying of cancer References: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v433/n7023/full/433195a.html The Born-Einstein Letters 1916-1955: Friendship, Politics and Physics in Uncertain Times by Albert Einstein & Max Born, Macmillan Science: 2005
Eduard Einstein, Mileva Einstein, and Hans EinsteinEduard Einstein, Mileva Einstein, and Hans Einstein
Albert Einstein attended college at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School, later renamed the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in 1911, following official designation 2 years earlier as a university.