Albert Einstein was the greatest scientist of the 20th century. The name “Einstein” is synonymous to the word “genius.” At age 26, the year 1905 has been called his miracle year. Within one year, he published 4 milestone papers that completely transformed the course of modern physics. His first paper, published in June 9, solved the mystery of discrete light particles, ushered in the quantum viewpoint into physics. It is this paper he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921. His second paper published July 18 on Brownian motion gives empirical evidence supporting the existence of atoms and created a branch of physics called statistical mechanics. The third paper published September 26 is the theory of special relativity, which was extended into the general theory of relativity 10 years later. His 4th and last paper of 1905 was published November 21. This is the paper that makes E=mc a household equation, the equivalence of mass and energy.
50 years later, at the age of 76, Einstein died of heart aneurysm. One hypothesis that Einstein’s brain was getting bigger while his heart was getting smaller could not be proven without studying brain topology and heart topology. Sadly, half of all evidence to support this theory has been lost. Except for his brain matter, Einstein’s remains were cremated and scattered in an unknown site. Although there was conclusive evidence that Einstein’s brain was distinctively different from other normal brain tissues. There was no direct evidence to his above normal intelligence. On the other hand, if there is evolutionary connection between man and monkey then studying monkey brain and monkey heart comparatively will show that monkey brain is relatively smaller than human brain and monkey heart is relatively bigger than human heart.


LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks
Reply With Quote


