Tuesday 1 November 2016

Book Excerpt: 'Einstein's Greatest Mistake: A Biography' (US 2016)


Widely considered the greatest genius of all time, Albert Einstein revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos with his general theory of relativity and helped lead us into the atomic age. Yet in the final decades of his life, he was ignored by most working scientists, and his ideas were opposed by even his closest friends. How did this happen? Einstein's imagination and self-confidence served him well when he was young. But when it came to the new field of quantum mechanics, the same traits undermined him. An intimate biography touching on the romances and rivalries of the celebrated physicist, as much as on his scientific goals, "Einstein's Greatest Mistake"reveals what we owe Einstein today — and how much more he might have achieved if not for his all-too-human flaws. Below is an excerpt from "Einstein's Greatest Mistake: A Biography" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016).
Einstein should have been happy. Revered worldwide since Eddington's confirmation of his theory in 1919, he was awarded the Nobel Prize of 1921 for his work in theoretical physics. Movie stars and royalty wanted to be near him; the mobbed appearances continued. But amidst that acclaim, amidst that fame, Einstein began to worry about one consequence of his celebrated theory—and his professional angst was also compounded by growing stress in his personal life
His divorce from Mileva Maríc (which had finally come through in 1919) had given him freedom, but it had distanced him from his two beloved sons. He tried writing them long chatty letters, but they were in no mood to accept their father's overtures. When he got them to visit him in Berlin, he purchased a telescope and put it on his balcony for them to use, but this didn’t help either. When Einstein did travel to Switzerland to take them on the sort of walking holidays they had liked before, everything was mannered, stilted. Once, in exasperation, he wrote to the elder boy, Hans Albert, from Berlin, taking him to task for being so cold. But Hans Albert was just as angry: his father was abandoning them, so how could he expect any kindness in return? Hans Albert later remembered that he felt as if a "gloomy veil" had come over what was left of their family life.
Einstein raged at Maríc for poisoning his children's minds against him, but he must have known that he was partly responsible—and for what? Life with Elsa Lowenthal hadn’t worked out as he had hoped. He had intended to keep the liaison strictly on his terms, having written to Besso in 1915 that it was "[an] excellent and truly enjoyable relationship . . . ; its stability will be guaranteed by the avoidance of marriage." Lowenthal, however, had a different view, and in June 1919—while Eddington was still on the tropical island of Principe—they had married. Almost immediately after the wedding, something changed. Maríc may have been resentful of the way she was left out of his scientific discussions, but at least she had understood the main lines of his work. Yet although Lowenthal’s lack of scientific education had been fine when Einstein was on the rebound, now he was discovering that behind her natural ebullience lay an intellect that left much to be desired. "She is no mental brainstorm," he later remarked.
During their courtship, Lowenthal had agreed with Einstein about the pleasures of an informal life and had enjoyed his mocking of wealthy, established Berliners. But once they moved into her seven-room apartment in a building with a grand lobby and a uniformed doorman, he felt trapped among her Persian carpets, heavy furniture, and display cabinets filled with fine porcelain. Some of her friends were thoughtful, but the majority, he was coming to see, were just chattering socialites. Worst of all, she began babying him. "I recall," her daughter wrote, "that my mother often said during lunch, 'Albert, eat: don't dream!'" It was all very far from romantic.
Soon Einstein began to have affairs. His mere presence, an architect who knew him well remembered, "acted upon women as a magnet acts on iron filings." Some of these women were younger than Elsa, some richer, and some both. What they saw was one of the most famous men on the planet, yet one who was unlike the stereotype of the desiccated intellectual. He was still fit and broad-shouldered (as friends who saw him take off his shirt noted); he loved telling wry Jewish jokes, and he had a direct, Swabian use of language. Actresses such as the renowned Luise Rainer soon wished to be seen with him. He spent evenings with a wealthy widow at her villa in Berlin and accompanied another woman, a fashionable entrepreneur, to concerts or the theater, riding with her in her chauffeured limousine.
The contrast between these other women and Elsa, with her chatter and her increasingly baffled disappointment, was painful for everyone. Einstein liked to go sailing, and when he did manage to find free time would head to their country house near a lake not far from Berlin, where he kept his sailboat Tümmler(German for "porpoise"). He would go out alone in the boat for hours, dreamingly adjusting the tiller as the winds skidded him here and there. His housekeeper described one regular visitor to the summer house when Elsa was away. "The Austrian woman was younger than Frau Professor," the maid recalled, "and was very attractive, lively, and liked to laugh a lot, just like the Professor." On one memorable occasion, Elsa found another woman's "article of clothing" still on the boat, and they had an argument that, in its cold fury, continued for weeks. Men and women were not designed to be monogamous, he insisted. Elsa confided to a few close friends that living with a genius was not easy—not easy at all.
This was not the marriage either of them had wished for. In the letter Einstein wrote to Besso’s adult children, consoling them after their father's death, he concluded: "What I admired most in him as a person was the fact that he managed for many years to live with his wife not only in peace but in continuing harmony—something in which I have rather shamefully failed twice."
If this were Einstein's only failure, it might have been bearable. But he was confronting an even worse problem. Even as early as 1917, at what should have been the peak of his accomplishment, Einstein had discovered what seemed to be a catastrophic flaw in his great G=T equation, and it had been preying on him ever more as the 1920s went on.
Excerpted from "Einstein's Greatest Mistake: A Biography" by David Bodanis. Copyright © 2016 by David Bodanis. Used by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

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7 Crazy Things I Did Because Of Girls Back In The Secondary School, I Bet You All Are Guilty Of Number 1


I can still remember vividly my secondary school
days like the alphabets A, B, C because those days
were very interesting, funny and also challenging.
It was in the Secondary school that we became
teens and pubertal, these led to some exuberant
characters .
It was in the secondary school that some of us
started chasing after ladies (don’t judge me) and
to be honest, sometimes the chase was easy and
others not. I and my close friend yesterday night
were just reminiscing about the crazy things we did
because of girls back then. Majorly because we
were trying to impress them, prove a point or just
because it was a stage .etc. I know you too did
some things (might not be crazy like mine) but
here is my own list.
1. Copying note for girls: even if I am yet to
complete my own note, I’m always willing to help
the girl I like complete hers no matter how long it
might be. I do that because I know I will get her
attention during the process and also have the
chance to hang out with her. Some girls later turn
me down even after writing more than 30 pages
but believe me, the tactic worked a lot of time.
2. Missing Dinning: this was not easy because on the
other hand I was a “foodie’ but had to miss most
of my meals then so that I could earn respect from
girls- they normally see guys that doesn’t come to
the dining hall as big boys who spend a lot in the
tuck shop. They don’t know some of us find solace
in our garri or end up begging for food from peeps
who went to the dinning. It was really crazy!!!
3. Attacking girls with “Devil’s beans’ : I know this
was cruel and mean but I and some of my friends
poured the evil seed on the chairs and lockers of
some girls in our class. This act was impulsed
because some girls insulted us, “formed” or
refused to accept our proposals. So we decided to
make them dance in pains and shame without music
while having fun. If you’re reading this, please
forgive me.
4. Missing Classes : this was really crazy and I still
don’t know why I had to do that because of girls.
Maybe because we thought girls then liked the
disobedient guys, “bad-guys’. With the mindset of
impressing girls, you would see us jumping out of
windows just so we could miss the lesson why the
girls settle and receive the lesson. That was not
crazy but unknown foolishness.
5. Showering Girls with Gifts: large sum of the
little pocket money I was meant to survive with in
the school was spent buying gifts for girls
especially during valentine and birthdays. We
wanted to act like “the rich kids of the school”
feeling on top of the world but always ended up
starving after some time while the girls enjoyed.
6. Lied a lot : for you to impress girls then you
must really be “mouthed’ and good at lying because
it was like my class girls liked lies and trust me I
was good at it (though I don’t do that again). I fed
them with sweet words that they couldn’t resist,
told them I had things I’ve not seen before.
7. Failed : I fell in love with Trisha in my senior
class but she refused to reciprocate the love. I was
depressed, sad, and suicidal, couldn’t concentrate
and even forgot why I was in school. The exams
came and I failed woefully; I was called out among
the last-five on the assembly ground and couldn’t
bare the shame. It was only by mercy I was not
repeated. CRAZY!!!
Those are now good memories I’ve learnt from and
still smile about.
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Double Disaster!!! Siblings Die In Kerosene Explosion In Akwa Ibom


Two children of the same parents were burnt to
death in a fire accident caused by a kerosene
explosion in Akwa Ibom State on Monday, October
31, 2016.
According to Akwa Ibom Trending, the incident
occurred in the home of a tricycle operator, Nsikak
Michael, a resident of Ikono Ibom Clan in Uyo Local
Government Area of the state, who also suffered
severe burns from the inferno.
The victim who also operates a small poultry farm
near his house, narrated that he wanted to add
kerosene to a lantern it exploded and before he
knew it, the lantern exploded, resulting in the
death of two of his three children.
“I bought kerosene from a filling station along
Idoro road as I closed from my Keke business.
Upon getting home, I decided to light up the
lantern in my poultry farm to keep my birds warm
but needed to top up the kerosene in the lamp as
it was soon going off.
So I came out of the poultry farm just as my kids
followed. As I attempted to light up the lantern,
there was a loud explosion with a big flame of fire
which left me unconscious.”
It was gathered that one of the two young children
died few hours after, while the other died the
following day at the University of Uyo Teaching
Hospital (UUTH), where they were rushed to
treatments.


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Lagos State Police Arrests Hotelier For Turning Job Seeker Into S3x Worker


The Lagos State Police Command has arrested a
hotelier, Victor Obano, for allegedly turning a 23-
year-old female job seeker into a commercial sex
worker in the Ijegun area of the state.
The police said Obano, who owned Tisa Hotel,
allegedly lured the victim, Elizabeth, from Akwa
Ibom, promising her employment in Lagos State.
Obano allegedly thereafter turned the job seeker
into a sex worker in the hotel.
Punch Metro learnt that Elizabeth, a mother of
two, reportedly got tired of being a commercial sex
worker, and on October 5, told her elder sister on
the telephone what she was going through.
The sister was said to have informed the police at
the Anti-Robbery Squad of the State Criminal
Investigation and Intelligence Department, Yaba,
leading to Obano’s arrest.
Punch gathered that another accomplice, a
commercial sex worker, identified as Grace Edet,
who allegedly was Elizabeth’s supervisor, was also
picked up by the police.
Speaking with Punch Metro at the command
headquarters, Ikeja, Obano, who admitted to have
brought the victim from Akwa Ibom, said he only
assisted her to find a means of livelihood.
He said, “I am the manager of Tisa Hotel in the
Ijegun waterside. I am not a human trafficker. It
was only this lady that I brought from the village.
I met with her father and he explained her
predicament. She is 23 years old. She has two kids
and she was living a miserable life. So, I decided to
get a job for her.
“The police arrested me because I seized her
phones. They said I did not want her to contact her
family members, but I collected her phone because
I did not want her to have an affair with several
men.
“It was her elder sister who reported the matter
to the police. The victim is with her brother
presently. The arrangement was that I would be
paying her and she would also hustle in the hotel
and send the money to take care of her father.
“The police should let this matter be settled
amicably. It is a family issue.”
The accomplice, Edet, told our correspondent that
Obano had instructed her to train Elizabeth in
commercial sex.
She said, “I have worked in the hotel for some
years. I am a commercial sex worker. When the
manager came back from Akwa Ibom earlier in the
year, he returned with the lady. He handed her
over to me, saying I should teach her some tricks
of the trade.
“I did not know the arrangement between them.
When I asked the lady why she was brought, she
replied that she was asked to hustle at the hotel.
So, I do not have any fault in the matter.”
A police source told our correspondent that Obano
allegedly had more girls he used as commercial sex
workers in his hotel.
The state Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni,
who paraded the suspects, said the command would
not tolerate any form of crime, urging the public
to always avail the police of credible information.
Punch
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