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Not Really...Einstein was really bad at maths. He had trouble talking. Some people believe his wife, Mileva Einstein, and his friend,Marcel Grossman, invented all the formulas and theories for him. Some believe that Einstein stole ideas from Lawrence Shwartz.

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What do Isaac Newton and Christopher Columbus have in common?

Gravity by Newton and space/time by Einstein. Newton's clock on earth has the same force as Einstein's clock, but when Einstein's clock moves to the top of Everest mountain, it will have less force. By Amin Elsersawi Both Newton and Einstein admitted that there is gravity. The gravity of Newton was on Earth, and the gravity of Einstein was the cosmological constant. Einstein made a big mistake when he added the cosmological constant to compensate for his thought that the universe was static (stand still). The cosmological constant was an anti-gravity 'vacuum' force that kept gravity from pulling the universe in on itself. In conclusion, Newton was right, and Einstein was wrong in distinguishing the gravity.


Why is Albert Einstein considered by some to be the smartest scientist in the world?

With all due respect to the memory of one of the rarest and most beautiful intellects in human history, Einstein has been dead for several decades, and so he is not the smartest scientist in the world. It is not even clear that he was the smartest while he was alive. He was one of many very powerful thinkers in the early and middle years of the last century, but he did have some differences of scientific opinion with some of them, some of which he lost. The word 'smart' indicates a relative level of knowledge and information. Information is important, but does not by itself define intelligence. Intelligence is an ability to de-construct, simplify, integrate, sythesize and re-imagine something, to think 'outside the box' and to solve problems, sometimes in breathtaking new ways. This is very much like what children do from birth on, as they test out and co-create the new world they are entering. Einstein certainly had the gift of intelligence in abundance, and there is a possibility that he had more of it than anyone else ever had or ever will have. But it is not really useful to speculate about this. People like Einstein are already breathing such rarefied air that distinctions among them are meaningless. I think we often miss one of the important lessons that people like Einstein give us. Freeing oneself from 'established' truth, and thinking a problem through with simplicity and clarity are really the kernel of genius, not accumulated book knowledge. We all have the seed of genius in us, but we get way too caught up in understanding how 'the other guy solved it'. That said, Einstein did have more than his share of brilliant insights, any one of which would have made his career. He did work on the photo-electric effect, and developed the general and special theories of relativity, theories which changed our world forever. Although he had some problems with Quantum Theory, he made some contributions to that field as well. He (working with Bose) predicted the existence of the Einstein-Bose Condensate, a markedly Quantum phenomenon, which has just been produced in the laboratory over the last few years.