Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Einstein Albert
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 179    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Einstein Albert:     more books (100)
  1. The Quotable Einstein by Albert Einstein, Alice Calaprice, 1996-09-16
  2. Einstein on Humanism (Volume 0) by Albert Einstein, 1998-08-18
  3. The Ultimate Quotable Einstein by Albert Einstein, 2010-10-31
  4. Albert Einstein (History Maker Bios) by Stephanie Sammartino McPherson, 2003-09
  5. In Albert's Shadow: The Life and Letters of Mileva Maric, Einstein's First Wife
  6. Relativity: Einstein's Theory of Spacetime, Time Dilation, Gravity and Cosmology by Albert Einstein, 2009-01-02
  7. Works of Albert Einstein by Albert Einstein, 2010-07-08
  8. Meaning of Relativity. Third Edition, Including the Generalized Theory of Gravitation by Albert Einstein, 1950
  9. The Einstein Reader by Albert Einstein, 2006-06-01
  10. The Meaning of Relativity: Fifth Edition: Including the Relativistic Theory of the Non-Symmetric Field (The Stafford Little Lectures of Princeton University, May 1921) by Albert Einstein, 1955
  11. Albert Einstein: A Biography by Milton Meltzer, 2007-10-30
  12. The Autobiography of Albert Einstein/Begins on Page 9 No Capitalization or Indentation by Gerhard Roth, Malcolm Green, 1993-03
  13. The Universe and Dr. Einstein by Lincoln Barnett, 2005-10-06
  14. The Murder of Albert Einstein by Todd Gitlin, 1994-02-01

81. Critial Thought And Religious Liberty - Quotes
Includes pages with quotes from America's founding fathers, albert einstein, Adolph Hitler, and Stephen Jay Gould.
http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/quotations.html

82. Radio-Canada.ca
Biographie, recueil de citations et bibliographie.
http://radio-canada.ca/url.asp?http://radio-canada.ca/par4/Maitres/Mentors/einst

83. Albert Einstein
albert einstein Biography and Much More From Answers.comView Poster albert einstein , Physicist Born 14 March 1879 Birthplace Ulm, Germany Died 18 April 1955 (heart failure) Best Known As Creator of.
http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/Museum/einstein.html
Albert Einstein (1879-1955) - Physicist. He was a man who did not finish high school and had difficulty finding a job after leaving school, but went on to explain relationships between light and mass, light and movement. Albert Einstein was born into a German family with "distant Jewish ancestry". He was a quiet boy who didn't talk until after he was three years old. As a teen, he became bored and disenchanted with school, so dropped out. Einstein was 26 and working at a patent office when he submitted his first scientific paper on the structure of light. That paper marked his career as one of history's best known and respected physicists. Einstein's findings, resulting from reassessment of well known research and experiments, went on to become known as The Theory of Relativity (the relationship between moving bodies and bodies at rest). By 1933, his work allowed him to recognize the relationship between energy and mass, represented by the simple but fundamental equation, E=mc. Einstein was primarily a physicist, but was also a humanist, a political activist, a war time pacifist, and a family man. His respected position allowed him relatively safe haven to publicly denounce the Jewish persecution during WWI. Einstein left Germany in 1932, settling at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, NJ. He eventually became a citizen of

84. Gravity Probe B
Gravity Probe B is the relativity gyroscope experiment being developed by NASA and Stanford University to test two extraordinary, unverified predictions of albert einstein's general theory of relativity.
http://einstein.stanford.edu/

85. Albert Einstein
PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. Library Historical albert einstein. albert einstein. 1879 1955 . Becoming a Freethinker and a Scientist (Off Site)
http://www.infidels.org/library/historical/albert_einstein/
PAID ADVERTISEMENTS
Library
Historical : Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein
Becoming a Freethinker and a Scientist (Off Site) Conversation on Religion and Anti-Semitism (Off Site) Conversation on Religion and Antisemitism (Off Site) The Development of Religion (Off Site) Einstein on the Mysterious (Off Site) Einstein: "God does not play dice" (Off Site) Four Pieces On Science and Religion (Off Site) Morals and Emotions (Off Site) No Personal God (Off Site) Note About Einstein's use of the word "God" (Off Site) On Prayer, Purpose, and the Soul (Off Site) On Prayer; Purpose In Nature; Meaning of Life; A Soul; Personal God (Off Site) Religion and Science: Irreconcilable? (Off Site) The Religiousness of Science (Off Site) Science and Religion (Off Site) Weaning Humankind from the Personal God (Off Site) Excerpts from The World as I see it (Off Site)
See Also:
Albert Einstein Online
Last updated: Thursday, 07-Jul-2005 00:02:56 MDT

86. Einstein, Albert
Su vida, trabajo, pensamientos, frases, personalidad y teor­as.
http://atomo.no-ip.org/
El website ha sido movido...
http://rv.atomo.info
Page Has Moved
This page has been moved to http://rv.atomo.info Please update your link. This page will redirect you to the correct link in 15 seconds.

87. Reader's Companion To American History - -EINSTEIN, ALBERT
einstein, albert. (18791955), physicist. einstein was born in Ulm, Germany, and grew up in Munich, in a family of independent-minded, nonpracticing Jews.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_027800_einsteinalbe.htm
Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Contributors ... World Civilizations The Reader's Companion to American History
EINSTEIN, ALBERT
, physicist. Einstein was born in Ulm, Germany, and grew up in Munich, in a family of independent-minded, nonpracticing Jews. Little is known about his childhood. Because he was slow in learning to speak—he was not fully fluent even at the age of nine—he was at various times thought to be mentally retarded. Some experts have speculated that he was dyslexic. A headmaster once told his father that what Einstein chose as a profession wouldn't matter, because "he'll never make a success at anything." At six he began learning to play the violin and became a gifted amateur violinist, maintaining this skill throughout his life. Einstein attended the Luitpold Gymnasium in Munich, which he disliked intensely for its authoritarianism. He was deeply interested in physics and mathematics and read eagerly in both subjects. Ultimately he rebelled, leaving Luitpold at fifteen without receiving his diploma. Without a gymnasium diploma, Einstein could not enter a German university, so he enrolled in the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich. He was so impressed with the democratic atmosphere of Switzerland that he formally renounced his German citizenship at the age of sixteen; in 1901 he was granted Swiss citizenship, which he retained for the rest of his life.

88. Literatura Sobre Albert Einstein
A obra de albert einstein © vista de modo n£o convencional, explorando acusa§µes de pl¡gio a einstein. Fic§£o misturase com Ciªncia, com referªncias a Mileva Maric, Michele Besso, Maurice Solovine e outros.
http://www.albert.einstein.nom.br
Literatura sobre Albert Einstein
© 2003 Prof. C.A. dos Santos
Atualizado em 1 de janeiro de 2005 O livro "O Plágio de Einstein" ganha prêmio na Itália.
Veja os ganhadores do o Prêmio O Sul - Correios e os Livros

Na páscoa de 1902, Maurice Solovine procurou Einstein para ter aulas particulares de física. Em seguida, na companhia de Conrad Habicht eles criaram a "Academia Olímpia". A partir da esquerda, Habicht, Solovine e Einstein. a partir da sua teoria da relatividade. Foi a partir desse imbróglio que nasceu a novela "O plágio de Einstein". Veja onde adquirir o livro Resenhas: Resenhas de livros sobre Einstein Para manter-se atualizado, por favor visite o O projeto Autor na Sala de Aula Veja a primeira parte das minhas respostas. Veja algumas frases de Einstein Veja neste artigo Livros de, e sobre Einstein publicados no Brasil Hipertexto para EAD ... Sitio comemorativo user = "carlos.alberto"; site = "ufrgs.br"; document.write(''); document.write('Contato ' + ''); Links interessantes sobre Albert Einstein Albert Einstein Einstein-Image and Impact.

89. Photographer Yousuf Karsh - Master Photographer
Brief biography and 4 portraits albert einstein, Andy Warhol, Audrey Hepburn and Winston Churchill.
http://www.photography.ca/otherartists/karsh.html
Fine art photographers - Fine art Photography - photography.ca
Home - photography.ca
Fine art photographers Tips and links Photography forum ... Email Yousuf Karsh - Master portraitist
Click the images for a larger view N.B. Please do not send any emails regarding Karsh. The webmaster of this site has no knowledge whatsoever on the value of a Karsh photograph, or how to get in touch with Karsh's estate. Yousuf Karsh (1908 - 2002) was born in Armenia in 1908 and grew up under the horrors of the Armenian massacres. His photographer uncle, George Nakash, brought him to Canada in 1924. After an apprenticeship in Boston with the eminent portrait photographer John H. Garo, Karsh settled in Ottawa in 1932, where he began his professional career. As early as 1936 he was photographing visiting statesmen and dignitaries, among them President Franklin Roosevelt. Karsh's major photographic exhibitions have attracted enthusiastic audiences worldwide, and he is much in demand as an eloquent and engaging speaker. His work is represented in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Philadelphia Art Museum, the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery of Canada,- the National Portrait Gallery, London, and other leading museums. He is a recipient of the Canada Council Medal and is a Companion of the Order of Canada (akin to a knighthood). Karsh was awarded the Presidential Citation (U.S.A.) for meritorious service on behalf of the handicapped. He has been Visiting Professor of Fine Arts at Ohio University at Athens and Emerson College in Boston, and has received more than two dozen honorary degrees.

90. Research Ethics Course - Albert Einstein College Of Medicine - Dr. Ruth Macklin
A research ethics course presented by Dr. Ruth Macklin, Professor of bioethics in the department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine.
http://www.aecom.yu.edu/crtp/resethics
Research Ethics Course by Ruth Macklin, Ph.D. Bioethics Last updated: 04 Sep 2002
Ruth Macklin, Ph.D. is a Professor of Bioethics in
the Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
This site has details of Dr. Macklin's course - Embedding Ethics in a Training Program in Clinical Research Methods Training Program introduces A Training Program in Research Ethics in the Americas , announced November, 2000. Complete details and an application form are available at Dr. Macklin's personal site. You can access Dr. Macklin's site via a link on the Training Program page, or by clicking on her photo above. Dr. Macklin's book, Against Relativism: Cultural Diversity and the Search for Ethical Universals in Medicine is available for online purchase from the Oxford University Press Ruth Macklin, Ph.D.
Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
1300 Morris Park Avenue
Bronx, NY 10461

91. Einstein_Note
albert einstein. He studied in Eidgenoessische Technische Hochschule in Zuerich Original photo in albert einstein Archives, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem
http://www.bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/phisci/Gallery/einstein_note.html
Albert Einstein He studied in Eidgenoessische Technische Hochschule in Zuerich (ETH), but could not get a job in any university; so he worked as a patent clerk (photo below) in Bern for a while (1902-1909). After this, he taught at Zuerich (1909-1911), Prague (1911-1912), Zuerich (1912-1914), Berlin (1914-1933), and finally became a professor at Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton (1932-1955). [Original photo in Albert Einstein Archives, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem] While in Bern, he continued his work on physics, and he published three important papers (among others) in 1905. One is the paper on photo-electric effect, proposing his light quanta hypothesis, drawing on Max Planck's quantum hypothesis; and he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1921 for this work. Another is the paper on special relativity, which brought a revolution in physics in the 20th century. He extended the idea of this paper to dynamics involving gravity; this gave birth to general relativity (1915), in which gravity can be represented by a curvature of spacetime. His two theories of relativity had a great impact upon many fields of human activities.

92. The Random Albert Einstein Quotes Page
Shows one random quote for every visit or button press. Requires JavaScript.
http://www.therightside.demon.co.uk/quotes/einstein/index.htm

93. Maîtres: Albert Einstein
Translate this page Biographie, recueil de citations et bibliographie.
http://radio-canada.ca/par4/Maitres/Mentors/einstein_galerie.html
Cette page utilise des cadres, mais votre navigateur ne les prend pas en charge.

94. TIME 100: Albert Einstein
Article provides a glimpse into the life of the physicist who is considered the father of modern science. Includes sound file, photographs, timeline, slide show, and quiz. From Time Magazine.
http://www.time.com/time/time100/scientist/profile/einstein.html
NATION WORLD BUSINESS ARTS ... CURRENT ISSUE AP Dr. Albert Einstein in 1934
Albert Einstein
By FRANK PELLEGRINI
21st Century: What's Next?
Test-Based Society: The IQ Meritocracy
They Were Onto Something: A Century of Science Fiction
Monday, March 29, 1999
Everything's relative. Speed, mass, space and time are all subjective. Nor are age, motion or the wanderings of the planets measures that humans can agree on anymore; they can be judged only by the whim of the observer. Light has weight. Space has curves. And coiled within a pound of matter, any matter, is the explosive power of 14 million tons of TNT. We know all this, we are set adrift in this way at the end of the 20th century, because of Albert Einstein. Leo Baekeland
Tim Berners-Lee

Rachel Carson

Albert Einstein
... Ludwig Wittgenstein Categories Leaders/Revol. Builders/Titans Scientiests/Thinkers Heroes/Icons We tend not to blame Einstein for the bomb, any more than we blame Nobel for dynamite. It wasn't the gentle theorist but the generals of the world who forged e=mc2 into the most terrible dagger in human history, and hoisted that Damoclean blade irretrievably over our heads in 1946. By then, the world had already iconized him: the greatest seer since Newton; science's poetic soul. Genius, in person. In a few thunderclaps of elegance he contained our world and the cosmos in the same equation, and changed forever the way the rest of saw the heavens and ourselves. Physics is built on the basic and rather wistful hypothesis that Mother Nature doesn't know much math. Remainders and constants are men's crumbs, not hers to a theoretical physicist, the Ten Commandments are too numerous by nine. By 1905, Newton's three were showing cracks under the scrutiny of stronger telescopes and better astronomy; the ether, an omnipresent invisible jello, was supposed to spackle Newton's world smooth again. To Einstein, the ether was just a remainder, and he got rid of it. Nothing can move faster than light, he said, and matter and energy are equivalent: E=mc2. The physicist Louis de Broglie called Einstein's contributions that year "blazing rockets which in the dark of the night suddenly cast a brief but powerful illumination over an immense unknown region." The new view was breathtaking.

95. Escuela De Matemáticas - UCV
albert einstein Creador y Rebelde (1973); Infeld, Leopold, albert einstein Su Trabajo y Su Influencia en Nuestro Mundo (1950);
http://euler.ciens.ucv.ve/matematicos/einstein.html
Los Matemáticos más famosos de todos los Tiempos: Niels Henrik Abel Arquímedes Banach, Stefan Bessel, Friedrich ... Einstein, Albert
El físico alemán-americano Albert Einstein, nacido en Ulm, Alemania, Marzo 14, 1879, muerto en Princeton, N.J., Abril 18, 1955, contribuyó más que cualquier otro científico a la visión de la realidad física del siglo 20. Al comienzo de la Primera Guerra Mundial, las teorías de Einstein sobre todo su teoría de la Relatividad le pareció a muchas personas, apuntaban a una calidad pura de pensamiento para el ser humano. Raramente un científico recibe tal atención del público pero Einstein la recibió por haber cultivado la fruta de aprendizaje puro. VIDA TEMPRANA. Después de dos cortos años obtuvo un puesto en la oficina suiza de patentes en Bern. La oficina de patentes requirió la atención cuidadosa de Einstein, pero mientras allí estaba empleado (1902-09), completó un rango asombroso de publicaciones en física teórica. La mayor parte de estos textos fueron escritos en su tiempo libre y sin el beneficio de cierto contacto con la literatura científica. Einstein sometió uno de sus trabajos científicos a la Universidad de Zurich para obtener un Ph.D en 1905. En 1908 le envió un segundo trabajo a la Universidad de Bern y llegó a ser docente exclusivo, o conferencista. El año próximo Einstein recibió un nombramiento como profesor asociado de física en la Universidad de Zurich.

96. Einstein Quotes
Collected quotes from the physicist.
http://rishikesh-tembe.tripod.com/moreq.htm
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Movie Clips Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Contact [Note: This list of Einstein quotes was being forwarded around the Internet in e-mail, so I decided to put it on my web page. I'm afraid I can't vouch for its authenticity, tell you where it came from, who compiled the list, who Kevin Harris is, or anything like that. Still, the quotes are interesting and enlightening.]
Collected Quotes from Albert Einstein
  • "Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." "Imagination is more important than knowledge." "Gravitation is not responsible for people falling in love." "I want to know God's thoughts; the rest are details." "The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax." "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." "The only real valuable thing is intuition."

97. Einstein, Albert
The GermanAmerican physicist albert einstein, b. Ulm, Germany, Mar. 14, 1879, d. You can find more information about him at albert einstein Online
http://euler.ciens.ucv.ve/English/mathematics/einstein.html
Einstein, Albert
The German-American physicist Albert Einstein, b. Ulm, Germany, Mar. 14, 1879, d. Princeton, N.J., Apr. 18, 1955, contributed more than any other scientist to the 20th-century vision of physical reality. In the wake of World War I, Einstein's theoriesespecially his theory of RELATIVITYseemed to many people to point to a pure quality of human thought, one far removed from the war and its aftermath. Seldom has a scientist received such public attention for having cultivated the fruit of pure learning. EARLY LIFE. Einstein's parents, who were nonobservant Jews, moved from Ulm to Munich when Einstein was an infant. The family business was the manufacture of electrical apparatus; when the business failed (1894), the family moved to Milan, Italy. At this time Einstein decided officially to relinquish his German citizenship. Within a year, still without having completed secondary school, Einstein failed an examination that would have allowed him to pursue a course of study leading to a diploma as an electrical engineer at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (the Zurich Polytechnic). He spent the next year in nearby Aarau at the cantonal secondary school, where he enjoyed excellent teachers and first-rate facilities in physics. Einstein returned in 1896 to the Zurich Polytechnic, where he graduated (1900) as a secondary school teacher of mathematics and physics.

98. Albert Einstein; La Relativité
R©flexion sur les implications de la th©orie principale du physicien et sur sa d©marche de savant. € propos de l'empirisme, de la logique et de la raison.
http://www.gillesguerin.com/philo/th/aeinst.htm

99. Quotes - Albert Einstein , Albert Einstein Quotations, Albert Einstein Sayings -
albert einstein Quotes, albert einstein Quotations, albert einstein Sayings Famous Quotes About
http://home.att.net/~quotesabout/alberteinstein.html
var max_words = 10; var max_links_per_word = 5;
Quotes From Famous People
Famous Quotes Search!
Quotations
Famous Quotes ...
Link to us!
Albert Einstein , Albert Einstein Quotations, Albert Einstein Sayings
Famous Albert Einstein Quotations
Best Quote of the Day! More Quote topics on right
Ctrl F (or equ.) to search
Quotes Home

12step Quotes

Addiction Quotes

Aesop Quotes
...
Jane Wagner Quotations

href="johnpowell.html">John Powell Quotations
John Steinbeck

John Stuart Mill
John Wayne Quotations John Wooden ... Looksmart Quotes
Multi-Site Quotes Search Engine
Search 12,000+ quotes pages! powered by FreeFind These quotes have been contributed and attributed by members of the Famous Quotes and Famous Sayings Network and many were previously posted to The Famous Quotes Mailing List. Please let me know if you find any errors or omissions or if you want to contribute. The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources. Albert Einstein The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift. Albert Einstein People like you and I, though mortal of course like everyone else, do not grow old no matter how long we live...[We] never cease to stand like curious children before the great mystery into which we were born.

100. Max Planck Institute For Gravitational Physics, Potsdam - Welcome
The alberteinstein-Institut (AEI), in Potsdam, is an institute of the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, and carries out research in gravitational physics.
http://www.aei-potsdam.mpg.de/
HOME Contact Links Job Offers Site Map Intranet Deutsch About the Institute Visitor Information Studying at the Institute Max Planck Research School ... Einstein@Home Welcome Home News Publications

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-100 of 179    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | Next 20

free hit counter