When did Albert create electricity?
Actually Benjamin Franklin did not invent electricity. (No-one did.) However, he did invent lightning rods and he did suggest experiments to show that there is a connection between lightning and electricity. For more about him you might like to read his page on wikipedia.
Was Albert Einstein glad he came to America?
he came to the u.s. to escape Germany and get a better more comfortable life.
When did Einstein come to America?
HE VISITED AMERICA IN 1921..came to America in 1933 but didn't become a citizen in 1940...:)
What is Theory Y in human relations psychology?
Theory X posits that people do not like to work and will avoid doing so if the opportunity presents itself. Because of this, most people need to be coerced into completing their required job duties and punished if they do not
Does high IQ mean higher success?
ahah, I love these types of questions involving IQ, intelligence, memory, etc... I'll give you my opinion. Well, IQ is a way to measure our potential to be intelligent. And normally people who are intelligent succeed, because they put they're mind to use, they stimulate their brain and have a specific personality. Directly, having a high IQ doesn't mean higher success because a high IQ only means you have the potential to be intelligent, it doesn't guarantee you succeed in any way. Nevertheless, indirectly, if you have a high IQ, you have the potential to be intelligent and therefore if you put that potential to use: by stimulating your brain, by trying to give your best, studying hard, looking always for things to do, success is likely to come your way. Success is in the mind, it's not a matter of luck, coincidence, spiritual beings. There are things to be done to have success. IQ just is one path to lead you to success. Most definitely in agreement with the above. One cannot just sit and say, "I have a high IQ.... I am a genius." Initiative is a must. In addition, other factors must be considered such as opportunities and motivation, psychological factors or disorders, and learning disabilities. What avenues were taken to address the challenges in order to become successful? Often motivation, experiences, opportunities, and support are key factors in becoming successful. ANSWER "Never confuse IQ with W2" lol
What ideas of Einstein and freud challenged old ways of thinking?
Freud challenged old ways of thinking as he was essentially the founder of modern psychology. Einstein challenged old ways of thinking by discovering the photoelectric effect which was instrumental in creating quantum theory.
How did albert Einstein come up with the answer to the equation e equals mc square?
[ e = mc2 ] is a statement, not a question.
It's one of the surprising results that pop up if you assume that - The laws of Physics are the same for everybody in the Universe
who isn't accelerating, and
- everybody in the Universe measures the same speed of light,
no matter how fast or slow he's moving. Some other things that pop up are the facts that the faster you drive
down my street, the more I see your mass increase, your car get shorter,
and your wrist-watch slow down.
What was named after the theorizer of relativity curium or einsteinium?
The name of the element einsteinium is derived from the name of the great well-known physicist of Jewish origin - Albert Einstein.
Technically, no.
Related Information:
He did come to America in 1933, to avoid persecution due to his faith (he was a Jew). He made the decision to relocate to a better life, and the US, was happy to have him.
He was already a world-renowned physicist and Nobel laureate, whose presence brought fame, respect, and admiration to Austria and Germany. He also had some wealth, and a job offer from Princeton University, which he accepted.
He was not among those tragic choice-less people, that by popular norms were considered to be refugees, fleeing behind a pushcart, filled with the meager remnants of their belongings. However, he certainly found it prudent to relocate in order to avoid the persecution brought by the ethnic and political excesses that were taking place in Europe, and especially Germany, at that time.
Had he left Germany after 1951, when the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, Article 1.A.2, adopted the following definition:
[A]ny person who: owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for
reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social
group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and
is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the
protection of that country.";
Then, by these later standards, he would have been considered a refugee.
Did Einstein say insanity is doing things the same way but expecting a different result?
Rita Mae Brown wrote that phrase in her book "Sudden Death" in 1983. Most people attribute that quote to Albert Einstein, but he actually did not say that.
Did Albert Einstein move to America because of the Holocaust?
Albert Einstein left Germany for Belgium in 1933. While out of the country, he heard about the upcoming Jewish boycott, and so decided not to return. Naturally, there was no way to predict the upcoming holocaust, but he did see that Germany was going into a dangerous direction. The Associated Press reported on April 1st, 1933 that his home was raided and his daughter, still in Germany at the time, had been mistreated.
Old answers:
No, Einstein left Germany before the holocaust.
He went back to Germany, during the holocaust and helped 200 Jews escape to America. So no, he was not forced to leave because of the holocaust. He left before any of that was happening.
He went to visit America when Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, and decided not to go back for a while.
How did Einstein change science?
Einstein effected science by proving that atoms existed that theres more to science than what we think there is.Theres the time that he split an atom aswell. I know liitle of Einstein but i ca tell you this, Einstein was a grate and honorable man who enjoyed his time here on Eath and i myself respect him very much i mean did any of the great scientists like Einstein ever split an atom i mean, sure they all helped Einstein figure things out but you have to admit that Einstein was byfar the most succeful scientist tha this world has ever endured until now of course especialy with global warming so respect all of your local scientist for they have done more than you could ever emagine why, without scientists we probably would have died out a long time ago scientists helped us adapt to our present situations. And anyway i should quite rambling on and on my name is desmoine thiessen i live in hucthinson kansas and this is a school computer i am thirteen years old and i kow some spanish but not much and since i was a little girl i dreamed of becoming a scientist and i will eventualy fullfill that dream no matter the cost! desmoine signing off.
Einstein effected science by proving that atoms existed that theres more to science than what we think there is.Theres the time that he split an atom aswell. I know liitle of Einstein but i ca tell you this, Einstein was a grate and honorable man who enjoyed his time here on Eath and i myself respect him very much i mean did any of the great scientists like Einstein ever split an atom i mean, sure they all helped Einstein figure things out but you have to admit that Einstein was byfar the most succeful scientist tha this world has ever endured until now of course especialy with global warming so respect all of your local scientist for they have done more than you could ever emagine why, without scientists we probably would have died out a long time ago scientists helped us adapt to our present situations. And anyway i should quite rambling on and on my name is desmoine thiessen i live in hucthinson kansas and this is a school computer i am thirteen years old and i kow some spanish but not much and since i was a little girl i dreamed of becoming a scientist and i will eventualy fullfill that dream no matter the cost! desmoine signing off.
Einstein effected science by proving that atoms existed that theres more to science than what we think there is.Theres the time that he split an atom aswell. I know liitle of Einstein but i can tell you this, Einstein was a grate and honorable man who enjoyed his time here on Earth and i myself respect him very much i mean, did any of the great scientists like Einstein ever split an atom i mean, sure they all helped Einstein figure things out but you have to admit that Einstein was byfar the most succeful scientist tha this world has ever endured until now of course, especialy with global warming and all. so respect all of your local scientist for they have done more than you could ever emagine why, without scientists we probably would have died out a long time ago scientists helped us adapt to our present situations. And anyway i should quite rambling on and on my name is desmoine thiessen i live in hucthinson kansas and this is a school computer i am thirteen years old and i know some spanish but not much and since i was a little girl i dreamed of becoming a scientist and i will eventualy fullfill that dream no matter the cost! desmoine signing off.
Does Albert Einstein have any living relatives?
Yes
Link :
http://discovermagazine.com/2008/mar/lesser-god/article_view?b_start:int=1&-C=
Children of a Lesser God 02.12.2008 by Michele Zackheim
Cults of historians, scientists, and everyday people persist in idolizing Albert Einstein. For his family, though, the name Einstein has cast a long, complicated, and difficult shadow. Today the two living grandchildren and five living great-grandchildren are weary of being hounded by Einstein worshippers and weary of trying to live up to the unprecedented achievements of their ancestor. They struggle to live private lives, well distanced from his fame, and they have succeeded: The most notable aspect of the Einstein descendants is how nearly invisible they are. Even in anonymity, though, there is no escaping the family legacy. Albert Einstein, a man of remarkable insights, was also a man of many serious flaws. His quixotic behavior and strained personal relationships loom menacingly over his descendants. Today the Einsteins are a fractured family. I recently spoke with Aude Einstein, Albert's granddaughter-in-law and the mother of all five of his great-grandchildren. I had spoken to other family members previously while researching a book about Albert's missing daughter, Lieserl, and I believed Aude was the only new source now available to me. I was petrified about calling her, and I rehearsed how I could broach the subject of her renowned ancestor without her hanging up on me. My anxiety was unfounded. As soon as I heard her welcoming voice, I thought it would be all right. Aude Ascher Einstein is in her seventies and lives in Switzerland. She is now divorced from Bernhard Einstein, the grandson of Albert. We had a friendly, lengthy telephone conversation. A few days later, though, she wrote to me and retracted her interview. "My family and I myself do not want you or anybody to write about our family. Sorry, but it would hurt and be destructive for the already precarious, fragile situation of our family. I deeply regret to have talked too much with you on the phone." I was not surprised, and in deference to her wishes, this article contains no other information from our conversation. "One cannot," Albert Einstein wrote, "expect one's children to inherit a mind." Yet his surviving family members are, to an extent, forced to define themselves against the judgments and expectations of a world that hungers for any lingering vestiges of the legendary genius. THE CHILDREN
Albert's family life was steeped in drama from the start. All three of his children were by Mileva Maric, his first wife: Lieserl, Hans Albert, and Eduard, called Tete, all born between 1902 and 1910. Lieserl, their out-of-wedlock daughter, appears to have died when she was 21 months old, most likely of scarlet fever at her mother's home in the Serbian province Vojvodina. Little is known about Lieserl; her only legacy is a complicated mystery filled with secrecy, subterfuge, and cryptic messages. Tete was admitted to the Burghölzli psychiatric hospital in Zurich when he was 38. He had been diagnosed as schizophrenic, but many people believe he was overdosed with drugs and harmed by the many "cures" that were used at the time. His father wrote to Mileva in 1932, "I am not in favor of psychiatric treatments." Less than two months later, when Tete was struggling to keep his emotional equilibrium, Albert wrote to him, "When you come to visit you must teach me about psychoanalysis; I'll try to keep a straight face." Tete and Hans Albert both tried to live up to their father's astonishing achievements. Hans Albert's adopted daughter, Evelyn Einstein, remembers that many of Einstein's friends and colleagues thought Tete was the one who had inherited his father's intellect. "He was definitely the genius," she says. "Next to Tete, my father was just a plodder." But Hans Albert was certainly smart enough. He studied at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and became a hydraulic engineer. "Rivers don't like to be changed around," he said. "They fight back." When Hans Albert was 21, he met Frieda Knecht, a woman nine years his senior. Frieda was, like his mother, Mileva, highly intelligent and intensely opinionated. Albert and Mileva, who had been rancorously divorced for three years, were united in their opposition to the proposed marriage. There were "such significant faults of heredity in both families," Albert wrote of Mileva's and Frieda's families. "If they would never have children, I could rest easy. But the heredity of our own children is not without blemish." This was an emotionally complicated statement; Albert had always accused Mileva and her family of having "bad genes," never admitting that he and his family might too. Now he was saying that Frieda came from unhealthy stock, that she was 4 feet 11 inches tall due to dwarfism, that Frieda's mother was unbalanced (when reportedly she had an overactive thyroid). Hans Albert and Frieda married despite these protests and remained together until her death. THE GRANDCHILDREN
With Lieserl gone and Tete institutionalized, it was left to Hans Albert to pass on the Einstein genes. Bernhard Einstein, born in 1930, was Albert's first grandson; Klaus, born in 1932, was his second. In 1938 the family immigrated to America from Switzerland, settling in Clemson, South Carolina, where Hans Albert found work studying soil conservation with the U.S. Agricultural Experiment Station. But within a year tragedy struck: Klaus died of diphtheria. A number of biographers assert that his parents were adhering to the canons of Christian Science and had not sought appropriate medical attention.
+++
Bernhard divides his time between Switzerland and California. He attended university in Zurich, then worked for the Swiss army, developing armor plating for tanks. He once recalled that when he was 25, his grandfather "talked to me for the first time ever about physics. He asked me what I know about energy, but he dropped the question immediately when he realized that I could not discuss the subject on his terms. That was the last time I saw him." Bernhard's sister, Evelyn, is the only one of Albert's descendants who still speaks openly with me. She lives in a home that is a jumble of history. When I first met her, in 1995, she was in her fifties, with cropped brown and silver hair, dressed in black pants and sandals and a bright crimson shirt. On her collar was a silver Star Trek pin. Due to illness, she could barely walk. She scooted among leaning towers of paper in an old wheelchair decorated with garishly colored plastic Star Trek gewgaws. On the day I visited, her house was a disaster. A water pipe had broken and flooded the living room; every surface was covered with piles of damp papers, and the sofa was heaped with dissolving cardboard boxes. "Don't be concerned; my house is always a bit upside down," Evelyn said, laughing. She invited me to sit on the clammy sofa. "I have to apologize for not dressing up for your visit," she continued with precise diction in a deep, lilting voice. "You see, my mother didn't teach me how to dress. And, as you can see"-she gave a sweeping gesture-"I have inherited my family's slovenly behavior. I'm not elegant." Evelyn was an infant when she was adopted by Hans Albert and Frieda. I listened in astonishment as she told me, "Since I was young, I have been told that I was really Albert Einstein's daughter." She believes that she may, in fact, be the result of an affair he had with a dancer in New York. But she does not insist: "I realized that this big, dark secret about my birth was an open book to many people. Since I have no proof, I thought that if I broached this subject to people they would think that I am crazy, a total fruitcake! So I never spoke about it." Thus Hans Albert, Evelyn's adoptive father, may possibly be her half brother, and Evelyn's brother, Bernhard, may be her nephew. Evelyn takes perverse delight in the scenario. Evelyn, born in 1941, is a highly intelligent woman, but her life as an Einstein has been awful. From the beginning, she felt closer to her mother and distant from her father. Married and then divorced, she had no children. Among a number of other jobs, she worked as a dogcatcher, a reserve policewoman, and a cult deprogrammer. After battling cancer and liver disease, she began to slide downhill. For a while she was living in her car and eating out of the trash. "I can tell you every good garbage Dumpster in the area," she said, "but I never panhandled a penny." With tenacity she pulled herself up, began to collect disability insurance, and settled down to a cloistered life, still possessing a wry sense of humor. THE GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN
"When I was 14," Evelyn said, "Bernhard took me for a ride on his motorcycle to the woods outside Zurich and told me that his wife, Aude [Albert's granddaughter-in-law], was pregnant. After Thomas was born, I remember feeling bad that my grandfather, Albert, did not live long enough to meet his first great-grandchild." I met Thomas in 1995 when I joined him and his aunt Evelyn for lunch at a fish restaurant in California. A handsome, quiet man, he seemed nervous about being with Evelyn but was very polite. In the conversation, he mentioned a "trust." Evelyn asked what it was. Thomas jumped to another subject, but I could see fire roiling in Evelyn's eyes. She later filed a complaint in California state court, alleging that her nephew and the trust's attorney had hidden a cache of letters from Albert Einstein to various family members estimated to be worth $15 million. Evelyn and her brother, Bernhard, had been named the beneficiaries of the trust. After a long legal battle and negotiations, the case was settled. Thomas, the father of three teenagers, is a physician, certified in emergency medicine and anesthesiology. He presently administers anesthesia for plastic, dental, and oral surgeons in California. Evelyn's favorite nephew seems to be Bernhard's second son, Paul Einstein, born in 1958. Since Paul was musically inclined, Bernhard gave him Albert Einstein's violin. Today he is married and living in the south of France, where he is a composer and violinist. In 2004 Paul performed at the German Physical Society's celebration of Einstein's 125th birthday in Ulm, where Albert was born. Paul played Mozart's Sonata in E Minor, Albert's favorite piece. Eduard (Ted) Einstein, Aude and Bernhard's third son, was born in 1960. Instead of going to college, he learned masonry and construction. He now owns several furniture warehouses and a retail furniture store in the Los Angeles area, where he is married, with children. Ted once appeared in a commercial driving a new Oldsmobile, touting its worth and declaring, "You don't have to be an Einstein to figure that out." Aude and Bernhard's only daughter, Mira Einstein Yehieli, was born in 1965 and now lives in Israel with her husband, a musician, and family. Evelyn told me that the last time she saw Mira was many years ago. "She was quite pretty, musically talented." Charly Einstein, Aude and Bernhard's last child, was born in 1971. He and his family live in Switzerland, where, according to a childhood friend, he grew up loving computer games, at one point selling them at a store he owned called Einstein's World. Later he worked as a spokesman for a large hospital in Switzerland. In an online posting, great-grandson Charly addressed what it was like being related to Albert Einstein: "Sometimes it appears to me that people think that he is some kind of God. Therefore it feels like many look upon me as if I was a great-grandson of God. To be honest, that is an extremely weird and alien feeling to me." Albert Einstein was an anomaly; neither his parents nor any of his progeny showed his inspired scientific insight. Despite that-despite his grappling with his last name-Charly feels a common thread connecting him and the rest of the family to his great-grandfather. "We Einsteins do not believe in authority. We solve problems in highly unconventional ways," he has said, "in our own way."
What are some famous Mexican foods?
Nachos are very famous, especially with a sour cream, salsa, and shredded cheese dip. It's delicious.
Is it true that Albert Einstein lived during the Holocaust?
yes he did. the holocaust was around 1933 yes he did. the holocaust was around 1933 The above answer is not correct. The Holocaust covered a time period from 1933 to 1945, and a geography from the English Channel to Stalingrad. Albert Einstein left Germany in the 1930s because of anti-Jewish laws. These discriminatory laws began in 1933 and became increasingly severe. Most Jews had left Germany by about 1938, so a minority of pre-1933 German Jews remained to be (most of them) murdered. The mass murders, the six million murders by bullet, gas, beating, starvation, and disease, was of non-German Jews, who were caught in the countries conquered by Germany after September, 1939. The following is from Wikipedia Other groups were also persecuted and killed, including the Roma; Soviet civilians, Soviet prisoners of war; ethnic Poles; the disabled; homosexual men; and political and religious opponents.[3] Most scholars, however, define the Holocaust as a genocide of European Jewry alone,[4] or what the Nazis called the "Final Solution of the Jewish Question." Taking into account all the victims of Nazi persecution, the total number of victims would be between nine and 11 million
Was galileo's family rich or poor?
Yes they were very poor. I'm just looking up the answer for research. I don't really know the answer. His Father was a doctor and he was a teacher in geometry, mechanics, and astronomy.
Who said 'science without religion is lame religion without science is blind?
; The quote is Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind. : Albert Einstein, "Science, Philosophy and Religion: a Symposium", 1941
More quotes of Albert Einstein; see link "Quotes Albert Einstein" on left.
Where did Albert Einstein live most of his life?
He lived somewhere in Germany then a different place then a different one and another one then somewhere anywhere. then he was very smart so.... .... ...... ...... ..... ..... .... ..... ..... .... ... ... ....... ............ ... .. ..... .
IM SORRY BUT YOUR COMPUTER CANNOT LOAD THE REST PLEASE TRY AGAIN. AND THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME....What month was George Washington Carver born?
George Washington Carver was likely born in either 1861 or 1864 in Diamond, MO.
One date that is celebrated is July 12, 1864 but other sources suggest he was born 3 or more years earlier. He died on January 5, 1943.
When did Albert Einstein win the Nobel Peace Prize?
He won it in 1964.
Martin Luther king Jr., born in Atlanta, Georgia, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, becoming the youngest man ever to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
martin king won the nobel peace prize in 1964 4years befor his assasination
Why did albert Einstein regretted getting involved in an atomic bomb?
Because it affected the world and killed heaps